Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Plan

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What is the best way to put people back into long-term housing after a natural disaster? Texas has a whack at looking at the issues from where we are today and where we could be tomorrow.

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Natural Disaster
Housing
Reconstruction
Plan

As required by HB2450, 81st Legislative Session
Submitted by the Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction
Advisory Committee
November 30th, 2010

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Advisory Committee Membership
Barbara Crews, Chairperson
Galveston County Restore and Rebuild
Holly Bell, Member
University of Texas at Austin, School of Social Work
Frank Cantu, Member
Texas Department of Public Safety
Stephan Fairfield, Member
Covenant Community Capital
Tom Hatch, Member
Hatch & Ulland Owen Architects
John Henneberger, Member
Texas Low Income Housing Information Services
Duke Mazurek, Member
FEMA Region 6 Recovery Division
Nick Mitchell-Bennett, Member
Community Development Corporation of Brownsville
Sterling Patrick, Member
City of Galveston, Grants & Housing Department
D.J. Pendleton, Member
Texas Manufactured Housing Association
Madison Sloan, Member
Texas Appleseed
Chuck Wemple, Member
Houston-Galveston Council of Governments

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Table of Contents
Background......................................................................................................................................................... 3 
Chapter #1: Evaluating existing systems of providing temporary housing to victims of natural disasters
.............................................................................................................................................................................. 5 
Chapter #2: Efforts to develop alternative temporary housing models for victims of natural disasters11 
Chapter #3: Obstacles to Implementing Temporary to Permanent Housing: A Case Study of the
Alternative Housing Pilot Program in Louisiana & Mississippi ............................................................... 15 
Chapter #4: Evaluating existing models for providing permanent replacement housing to victims of
natural disasters ................................................................................................................................................ 25 
Chapter #5: Designing alternatives to existing models to improve the sustainability, affordability,
desirability, and quality of housing rebuilt in the event of future natural disasters ............................... 29 
Chapter #6: Encouraging the participation, coordination, and involvement of appropriate federal
organizations .................................................................................................................................................... 33 
Chapter #7: Recommendations for the rapid and efficient large-scale production of temporary and
permanent replacement housing following a natural disaster ................................................................... 36 
Pre-Disaster Recommendations ........................................................................................................... 36 
Post-Disaster Recommendations ......................................................................................................... 45 
Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................................ 57 
Appendix A: The Heston Home Project and Why it Did Not Work for Texas.................................... 58 
Appendix B: Evaluating Permanent Manufactured Housing Costs......................................................... 60 
Appendix C: Community Roundtable Public Participation ...................................................................... 63 

2

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Background 
STATUTORY DIRECTIVE
The Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Advisory Committee was created by the 81st Legislature’s
HB 2450, authored by Representative Craig Eiland and Representative Ryan Guillen, and sponsored by
Senator Eddie Lucio Jr. The Advisory Committee members were appointed by the Executive Director
of the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) with the purpose of
developing a Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Plan.
In the process of developing this plan, the advisory committee was tasked with the following duties:







Evaluate economic circumstances of elderly, disabled, and low-income victims of natural
disasters and develop models for providing affordable replacement housing;
Evaluate existing systems of providing temporary housing to victims of natural disasters and
develop alternative systems to increase efficiency and cost-effectiveness;
Evaluate existing models for providing permanent replacement housing to victims of natural
disasters;
Design alternatives to existing models to improve the sustainability, affordability, desirability,
and quality of housing rebuilt in the event of future natural disasters;
Encourage the participation, coordination, and involvement of appropriate federal
organizations; and
Recommend programs for the rapid and efficient large-scale production of temporary and
permanent replacement housing following a natural disaster.

HB 2450 further states that once completed, this Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Plan will be
used by the Executive Director and Advisory Committee to develop a Housing Reconstruction
Demonstration Pilot Program to test the feasibility of implementing the plan for “the large-scale
production of replacement housing for victims of federally declared natural disasters.”1
COMMITTEE ACTIVITIES
From June to August of 2010, the Advisory Committee conducted a series of conference calls to
deliberate on each of its legislatively appropriated duties and gather research on each topic. After
discussing the key topics involved in reconstructing housing after a natural disaster, the Committee
decided to hold three community roundtables in areas affected by recently federally declared natural
disasters: Hurricanes Rita, Ike, and Dolly. The Committee completed the following community
roundtable schedule:


Harlingen Roundtable – Wednesday, August 25th, 2010, 11:00am – 1:00pm
o Harlingen Public Library Auditorium, 410 ‘76 Dr, Harlingen, TX 78550-5072

1

Texas Government Code, Sec. 2306.542. Housing Reconstruction Demonstration Pilot Program.
http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/GV/htm/GV.2306.htm

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 



Houston Roundtable – Tuesday, August 31st, 2010, 10:30am – 1:00pm
o Houston-Galveston Area Council, 3555 Timmons, Conf. Room A, Houston, TX 77027



Galveston Roundtable – Thursday, September 2nd, 2010, 11:00am – 1:30pm
o McGuire-Dent Recreation Center, 2222 28th Street, Galveston, TX 77550-7707

In order to get a clear understanding of current housing rebuilding activities after Hurricane Ike, the
Galveston Community Roundtable was followed by a tour of a Hurricane Ike home in San Leon, TX.
This was a modular home constructed by Oak Creek Homes and funded by the Galveston County
Disaster Housing Department’s allocation of Hurricane Ike Round 1 Community Development Block
Grant funding.
Finally, during September and October of 2010, the Advisory Committee held two in-person meetings
to formulate a set of recommendations for the Housing Reconstruction Plan, taking into account
previous research gathering efforts and testimony heard during the community roundtables. After these
meetings, staff compiled these recommendations and completed the full Housing Reconstruction Plan,
which was then submitted to the Executive Director of the Texas Department of Housing and
Community Affairs.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #1: Evaluating existing systems of providing temporary housing to 
victims of natural disasters 
This chapter of the Plan discusses the existing systems used by FEMA to provide immediate,
temporary housing following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, primarily drawing from information
gathered by the U.S. Government Accountability Office and testimony given to the Ad Hoc
Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs. Particularly, this section looks at the consequences of flawed policy and
financing decisions made at the federal level to temporarily
house disaster victims. These consequences include delays
Affects of Hurricanes Katrina & Rita on
in the allocation of assistance, miscommunication
Low Income Individuals
regarding consumer eligibility, confusion and frustration on
the part of consumers, service providers, and local public
Before Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, those
officials, and ultimately a failure to aid those who needed it
living along the Gulf Coast were already
most. Within this chapter, the unique circumstances of low
facing issues of poverty, especially amongst
income individuals, persons with disabilities, and persons
women: 16.2% of women in the
who are elderly are discussed.
Beaumont-Port Arthur MSA lived below
the poverty line and 34.7% of femaleFindings 
headed families with children in that MSA
lived below the poverty line.
Texas
ranked
44th
out
of
50
states
for
the
BACKGROUND – THE 2005 HURRICANE SEASON
percent of women living below the poverty
line, and particularly the earnings of
Between August 29th and November 1st, 2005, at least
African-American and Hispanic women in
400,000 people were evacuated due to Hurricane
Texas failed to exceed the national average.
Katrina, Rita, & Wilma and thousands remained in a
transitional state following these disasters, not knowing
Additionally, low income residents had
when or if they could return home. Those with the
fewer choices with respect to how to
fewest resources experienced the highest level of
prepare for the imminent arrival of
uncertainty. Additionally, the victim’s of the storm
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. People living
most in harm’s way and most neglected by the
in social isolation and poverty, especially
government’s response were poor and Black, many of
the elderly and the disabled, have scarce
whom were elderly or disabled. 2
economic
resources
and
locally
concentrated social networks and are
From September 2005 to March 2006, FEMA received
therefore less able to recuperate their
over 2.6 million applications for individual disaster
losses after a hurricane. Since Katrina hit at
the end of the month, many residents in
assistance, 66% due to Katrina. The Congressional
Louisiana who live paycheck to paycheck
Research Service (CRS) estimated that of the 711,698
had scarce resources for evacuating.
individuals acutely impacted by Katrina, 21% had
Furthermore, low income individuals are
incomes at or below the poverty level and another 20%
least likely to own vehicles, making
were between 100-199% of federal poverty.
voluntary evacuation more costly and
Additionally, of the approximately 700,000 people who
logistically more difficult.
lost their homes, an estimated 300,000 were low
(Source: There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster:
income or very low income. In the end, housing that
Race, Class, and Hurricane Katrina, 2006)
2

Crowley, Sheila, “Chapter 7: Where is Home? Housing for Low-Income People after the 2005 Hurricanes,” Routledge
Taylor & Francis Group, There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster: Race, Class, and Hurricane Katrina, 2006

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
was affordable to low-income people comprised the majority of what was destroyed. The National
Low Income Housing Coalition found that over 300,000 housing units were seriously damaged or
destroyed by Katrina, 73% of the total housing stock in the areas affected. Of those damaged or
destroyed units, 71% were affordable to low-income households, including 57% ownership units.
Additionally, in March 2006 HUD reported that 27 public housing authorities (PHAs) in Alabama,
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas had over 13,600 units that sustained catastrophic or major
damage.
After Katrina, those living below the poverty line face even more dire economic circumstances. In
many of the areas of Texas where the most evacuees were relocated, they were faced with high
poverty rates, particularly for women and female-headed households (Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston,
and San Antonio all had over 40% poverty rate for female-headed households).
TEMPORARY HOUSING PROVISION3,4
The Stafford Act authorizes FEMA to expend federal funds to provide assistance to state and local
communities once the President has issues a disaster declaration. Temporary housing assistance
through FEMA takes two forms, the first of which is Section 403 – Public Assistance (PA)
Program.5 Section 403 makes funds for emergency shelter available to states, local governments,
and social service agencies. Section 403 has no individual eligibility
requirements and no limitations/caps on the amount of federal
Group Sites
funding provided.
About 72% of group site
households in Louisiana and
84% in Mississippi reported
being pre-disaster renters,
many of which had low
incomes, were elderly, or had
a disability. The reported
average income of households
on group sites was less than
half of the Louisiana state
average and less than twothirds of the Mississippi state
average. Those who remained
in the group sites the longest
were those with limited
income and limited choices to
find stable employment and
permanent housing.
(Source: GAO-09-796, August 2009)






Manufactured Housing – Factory built housing designed for
long-term residential use. This type of housing must be
located on sites that are not in a designated floodplain area.
Recreational Vehicles – Include park model and travel
trailers; are designed for short-term use when no other
options are available.
Private Site – Unit is placed on an individual’s private
property if the site is feasible and local authorities approve.
Group Site – Unit is placed at a site FEMA has built to
house multiple households. FEMA’s policy is to use
commercial manufactured housing or recreational vehicle
parks whenever possible, rather than build sites on parks,
playgrounds, ball fields, and parking lots.

Recreational Vehicles & Manufactured Housing: During the
recovery effort following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, recreational
vehicles and manufactured housing were the two most common

3

Crowley, Sheila, “Chapter 7: Where is Home? Housing for Low-Income People after the 2005 Hurricanes,” Routledge
Taylor & Francis Group, There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster: Race, Class, and Hurricane Katrina, 2006
4
US Government Accountability Office, GAO-09-796, “Disaster Housing: FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and
Performance Measures to Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters,” August 2009.
5
“Far from Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing Assistance After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and
Recommendations for Improvement,” Special Report by the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the US
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, February 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
forms of emergency temporary housing units deployed by FEMA. In most cases, FEMA placed
these units on private property near the household’s home (115,400 households); however 25,000
households were placed in units at over 700 group sites, including stadium grounds, school fields,
and preexisting trailer parks. FEMA was unable to meet the demand for trailers, with a waiting list
of over 40,000 in Louisiana. Additional problems with the FEMA trailers included being placed in
unsuitable environments, resistance from local communities, inaccessible to individuals with
physical disabilities, and being structurally unsuitable for hurricane-prone areas which created an
unsafe living environment.
Hotels & Motels: Roughly 85,000 displaced families were placed in hotels paid for by FEMA
Section 403 funds. FEMA’s attempts to end this program in December 2005 resulted in a lawsuit.
FEMA announced numerous deadlines for hotel aid, causing confusion and worry among hotel
dwellers.
Rent Assistance: An estimated 60,000 units were rented by states, local governments, and social
service agencies that agreed to pay landlords directly in anticipation of reimbursement from FEMA.
After the Department of Homeland Security criticized allowing one-year leases, FEMA stated that
leases would only last three months causing confusions and distress amongst landlords who were
uncertain if their leases would be honored. Although FEMA was supposed to transition people
from Section 403 to Section 408 Temporary Housing Assistance, 18,000 of the 55,000 households
under Section 403, most of them low income, were deemed ineligible for IHP rental assistance and
thus received no housing assistance after April 2006.
TRANSITIONAL HOUSING PROVISION6 ,7
The second type of temporary housing assistance through FEMA is Section 408 – Transitional
Housing Program. Section 408 makes transitional housing available directly to displaced people
who meet certain criteria. The amount of assistance provided through Section 408 is based on
factors such as assessments of damage, financial need, and fair market rent and
individuals/households are eligible if their pre-disaster residence is rendered uninhabitable.
Following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, the Section 408 was split into two distinct types of
assistance: the first part, administered by FEMA, provided direct assistance to eligible evacuees.
Part two, administered by HUD, provided voucher-like aid to eligible displaced households that
were receiving HUD assistance prior to the hurricane. Despite the fact that government
appropriated $3.5 billion to fund 350,000 Housing Choice Vouchers for Katrina evacuees, this
program was not used under Section 408.
Section 408 Transitional Housing Program – Part One:
FEMA provided $2,358 to each eligible household for 3 months rent; this amount equaled the
national Fair Market Rent (FMR) for a two bedroom unit. Eligibility was determined as those who
6

“Far from Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing Assistance After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and
Recommendations for Improvement,” Special Report by the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the US
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, February 2009.
7
Crowley, Sheila, “Chapter 7: Where is Home? Housing for Low-Income People after the 2005 Hurricanes,” Routledge
Taylor & Francis Group, There is No Such Thing as a Natural Disaster: Race, Class, and Hurricane Katrina, 2006

7

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
owned or rented a home that FEMA verified as uninhabitable, however there was no clear way for
determining uninhabitable units, as no inspections were undertaken. Once this error emerged, a
change in policy caused further funding allocation delays and inconsistent information
dissemination. Many individuals didn’t know if money could be used for things other than housing
and since checked were mailed weeks before FEMA’s instructions were sent, many households had
already spent their funds.
People who received the initial $2,358 had to go back to FEMA to be recertified for additional
assistance. No eligibility or application procedures for ongoing assistance were ever published.
Many evacuees were denied assistance, either when converting from 403 to 408 or via
recertification under 408 because FEMA claimed they could go home. However, in many cases,
homes were still not habitable, former landlords had raised rents or rented out the property to other
people, and there were no assurances of jobs or schools.
Section 408 Transitional Housing Program – Part Two:
HUD created the Katrina Disaster Housing Assistance Program (KDHAP) for those individuals
who were previously in public housing, Section 8 project based aid, Housing Choice Vouchers,
Section 202, Section 811, etc. Also eligible were homeless persons who participated in HUDfunded homeless service programs. However, between 6,000 to 10,000 people resided in the
affected areas who were homeless and not previously participants in HUD programs, thus ineligible
for disaster aid.
Many barriers existed to families receiving KDHAP assistance. First, PHAs were required to
participate and many were reluctant to become involved because there was no guarantee of
assistance past the first few months and the funds provided didn’t cover the cost of security
deposits or utility payments, nor the search assistance needed to place a family in a home.
Therefore, only 355 PHAs out of 2,600 nationwide agreed to administer KDHAP, Second, families
had to know to affirmatively apply for KDHAP, separately from FEMA registration as there was
no assurance that FEMA would tell a family how to apply or if they were eligible. Finally, due to
PHAs’ reluctance to work with homeless or previously homeless, HUD created another program
called KDHAP-SN (special needs), but no guidance was issued for this program until 6 months
after the hurricane hit. Because no guidance was given on how an eligible person would know that
they were eligible or how to find the administering agency to contact, yet another service barrier to
the most vulnerable of displaced people.
POLICY DESIGN FLAWS LIMIT ASSISTANCE TO LOW INCOME INDIVIDUALS
As the Section 403 and 408 programs were administered, many flaws appeared in the design of
program rules and regulations. First, the eligibility criteria for Section 408 did not cover people who
were neither homeowners nor renters – those low income persons “doubling up.” Doubling up is a
common housing practice where more than one household resides in the same place because
neither can afford their own homes. However, under FEMA, if two households register and give
the same address, one household was disqualified – the “shared household” rule.
Second, since most urban housing markets rents far exceed the national Fair Market Rent (FMR),
which is the standard used for FEMA assistance, many households receiving assistance weren’t
assured that they would be able to afford the rent. Additionally, FEMA funding was not allowed for
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
security deposits or utilities, both of which can be quite costly, further burdening poorer
households. Third, FEMA only provided assistance in 3 month increments, which deterred a large
number of landlords from agreeing to rent to evacuees who depend on FEMA rental assistance,
due to the lack of certainty regarding when and if the assistance would be extended or renewed.
Furthermore, in many locations close to the affected disaster area, the influx of evacuees and lack of
vacancy caused the cost of rental housing skyrocketed much higher than the FMR.
Finally, after the initial appropriation of federal disaster relief funding, the first rebuilding
supplemental appropriation, approved on December 30, 2005, reallocated $17.1 billion to hurricane
rebuilding efforts. However, the bill reduced income-targeting for the use of CDBG funds from
70% of funding to low and moderate income households, to 50% of funding. Additionally, HUD
had the authority to waive the 50% requirement if a state could demonstrate compelling need.
These policies effectively limited the number of low-income individuals and families receiving
assistance.
THE AFTERMATH - FEMA’S NATIONAL DISASTER HOUSING STRATEGY
Acknowledging the many failures that occurred in the housing recovery effort following the 2005
hurricane season, Congress passed the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act
(PKEMRA) in October 2006. PKEMRA required that FEMA develop, coordinate, and maintain a
‘national disaster housing strategy’ that describes, among other things, plans for the operation of
temporary housing options, such as travel trailers. On January 16, 2009, FEMA released the final
version of its National Disaster Housing Strategy, which among other things, outlines the most efficient
and cost-effective way to best meet the short and long-term housing needs of individuals and
households affected by a major disaster. However the Strategy does not identify alternatives to
travel trailers because evaluations are ongoing, nor does it provide clear guidance on what other
temporary housing options states should use instead of travel trailers while FEMA completes these
assessments. The Strategy also fails to describe the specific conditions where trailer would be a
viable option or those situations where trailer should not be used.
The Government Accountability Office found this gap in FEMA’s Strategy troubling, seeing as
travel trailers in group sites are the least preferred temporary housing option when it comes to
suitability.8 The GAO found that after the 2005 hurricanes, travel trailers were placed in isolated
locations and lacked access to needed services. However, FEMA’s Strategy does not recommend
any replacement option that would be deployable on the scale needed to respond to a major
disaster.
The GAO study identified three factors to be used to assess how trailers in group sites compared
with possible alternative temporary housing options:


Cost – Total cost to the government for purchasing, installing, maintaining and deactivating the
housing unit. The average unit cost for trailers ranged from $75,000 to $84,000, while the
monthly rents for existing housing units were based on HUD fair market rent levels.

8

US Government Accountability Office, GAO-09-796, “Disaster Housing: FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and
Performance Measures to Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters,” August 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 


Availability – Assessing the viability of temporary housing options. FEMA faced obstacles in
locating victims close to their home communities as well as confronted unwillingness on the
part of local landlords to participate in the program.



Suitability – Temporary housing options must be in close proximity to work or transportation
routes, to access health and social services. The GAO recommended utilizing existing
administrative networks, like PHAs, to help find suitable housing.

The GAO study concluded by acknowledging that no single alternative to travel trailers was best
suited to provide temporary housing after a disaster, but that a mix of housing options should be
considered. However, while FEMA policy states that travel trailers will be used as a last resort,
officials acknowledged that trailers will continue to be used following a catastrophic disaster as a
main source of temporary housing.9
CONCLUSION
Fundamental to the future of housing in those areas affected by natural disasters, particularly along
the Gulf Coast, is the question of who has the right to return. Is each displaced person who wants
to come home going to be welcome? Low income housing organizations are faced with the
conundrum of how to preserve affordable housing for the lowest income people, including persons
who are elderly and persons with disabilities. Unless innovative housing options are implemented,
the probability that enough new housing affordable to the lowest income people will be built to
replace the numbers of affordable units they could afford that were lost is very low.

9

“Far from Home: Deficiencies in Federal Disaster Housing Assistance After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and
Recommendations for Improvement,” Special Report by the Ad Hoc Subcommittee on Disaster Recovery of the US
Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, February 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #2: Efforts to develop alternative temporary housing models for 
victims of natural disasters 
JOINT HOUSING SOLUTIONS GROUP (JHSG)10
As mentioned in the previous chapter, following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita emergency housing
needs were largely satisfied by the use of travel trailers, manufactured housing, and park model
homes. While each of the types of housing had advantages for specific applications, it could be
argued that those units were purchased based largely on their availability.11 Based on the experiences
in the Gulf Region, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) created the Joint
Housing Solutions Group (JHSG) in September 2006, to assess potential housing products and
producers. The JHSG was created with the mission of improving FEMA’s disaster housing
assistance capacity by increasing the range of housing options it can provide to individuals and
communities impacted by disasters.
One of the main accomplishments of the JHSG was to update the Housing Assessment Tool (HAT
2.0), a survey instrument intended for housing developers which contains 186 questions about the
major aspects of potential housing products. This tool uses four criteria, including Range of Use
(adaptability under various conditions), Livability (how well units accommodate for a household’s
daily living essentials), Timeliness (how fast units can be made ready for occupancy) and Cost (how
cost-effective the unit is in absolute terms and relative to other housing options). The revised HAT
was deployed February 20, 2009.12
Other duties completed by the JHSG included the creation of a Disaster Housing Scoping Tool to
help define and project housing needs following a disaster. The primary function of the Tool is to
assist FEMA planning teams to more systematically and accurately predict if a direct housing
mission is required, as well as project the parameters of this mission. Additionally, JHSG created
Occupant Surveys to assess the problems incurred by tenants of temporary housing and their
overall satisfaction, assessed the potential of alternative temporary units, updated baselines for
Alternative Housing Unit RFP, and released solicitation for Improved Travel Trailers.
As published in the 2007 FEMA Disaster Assistance Directorate (DAD), the JHSG identified seven
action items that FEMA should consider implementing to leverage the lessons and knowledge
gained from JHSG assessments to strengthen its temporary housing mission.13 They include:


Development of Alternative Housing Options Strategy - This strategy would pull together the
housing stakeholders, establish concrete alternative housing options objectives, and lay out a

10

Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Alternative Housing Pilot Program,” A presentation at the National
Hurricane Conference, April 9, 2009.
http://www.hurricanemeeting.com/files/09Presentations/K1%20Naomi%20Johnson%20Ryan%20Buras.pdf
11
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, Office of Policy Development and Research, “Joint Housing
Solutions Group,” Cityscape: A Journal of Policy Development and Research, Vol. 9, No. 3, 2007.
http://www.huduser.org/periodicals/cityscape/technotes/JHSG.pdf
12
Federal Emergency Management Agency, Housing Assessment Tool, “Joint Housing Solutions Group,”
www.asd.fema.gov/inter/hat/public/aboutJHSG.htm
13
Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Disaster Assistance Directorate,”
http://www.fema.gov/media/fact_sheets/dad.shtm

11

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 








plan for choosing alternative housing options, exploiting or creating new alternative housing
opportunities, and operating within the context of the National Disaster Housing Strategy.
Continued Identification and Assessment of Potential Alternative Housing Units
Pilot of Most Promising Alternative Housing Unit(s)
Development of Performance Specifications for New Alternative Housing Units (Other Than
Travel Trailers, Park Models and Manufactured Homes)
Procurement Plan for Pilot and Full Implementation of Alternative Units
Increased Coordination Between JHSG and Alternative Housing Pilot Program (AHPP)
Public Information and Outreach

Finally, beginning in 2009, JHSG awarded four contracts to TL Industries, Frontier RV, Harbor
Homes, and D&D Disaster Services for the manufacture of low emission travel trailers.14 JHSG
developed new performance specifications, including requirements to eliminate the use of
formaldehyde emitting materials, maintain continuous air exchange, install venting and HVAC
systems that meet HUD standards, and test air quality of units. FEMA intends to order at least 100
units from each contract award, with the ability to order 6,000 units, divided equally among
contractors, each year for five years.
FEMA – ALTERNATIVE HOUSING PILOT PROGRAM (AHPP)15
In 2006, Congress appropriated $400 million for a four year pilot program (Public Law 109-234) to
identify and evaluate better ways of housing disaster victims. The objectives of AHPP are to:
(1) Evaluate the efficacy of non-traditional short and long-term housing alternatives,
(2) Identify, develop, and evaluate alternatives to and alternative forms of FEMA disaster housing,
(3) Consider the feasibility of these options as a part of housing assistance that could be made
available by federal agencies or state agencies for other disasters,
(4) Assure that pilot projects address the needs of a variety of populations, such as persons with
disabilities and the elderly, and historically underserved populations
FEMA stated that the program’s implications were to increase federal options for the types of
disaster recovery units, augment recovery knowledge through evaluation of the program’s impact
on residents’ quality of life, increase capacity at the state and local level, and enhance collaboration
amongst federal, state, and local governments and the private sector.
Background of AHPP
On September 15, 2006, the AHPP Guidance and Application Kit issued and by October 20th, 29
projects were submitted to FEMA. Ultimately, five projects were chosen in four states: Louisiana,
Mississippi, Texas, and Alabama. Projects were scored based on five factors, including: the manner
in which they improve upon existing temporary housing and long term recovery; the extent to
which the option can provide ready for occupancy housing with time frames and in quantities
sufficient to meet disaster needs; the life cycle cost, including cost to acquire, transport, install, and
14

RV Business, “FEMA Awards Contracts to Four Trailer Makers,” April 8, 2009, www.rvbusiness.com/2009/04/femaawards-contract-to-four-trailer-makers
15
FEMA, “Alternative Housing Pilot Program,” A presentation at the National Hurricane Conference, April 9, 2009

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
maintain housing; the capacity of the approach to be utilized in and adapted to a variety of site
conditions and locations; and the extent to which local officials and communities are part of or
support the program.
As one of the goals of the AHPP was to enhance cross-agency collaboration, FEMA and HUD
explored the possibility for greater partnership through the program’s implementation and
evaluation. Both agencies played a role in funding the projects, monitoring compliance, providing
technical assistance, evaluating the results of the program, and perform national outreach to
disseminate these results. Additionally, the state grantee was given a significant role in administering
the AHPP. States managed the project by submitting input on the design of units, selecting suitable
sites for placement, select eligible applicants, and maintaining the general scope of the project. The
state grantees were also responsible for ensuring that project met the various program
requirements, including environmental and accessibility standards. A final report of the impacts and
success of the AHPP is expected to be released by FEMA and HUD in December of 2011.
Projects Undertaken through AHPP16,17
City of Bayou La Batre Project, Alabama. Bayou La Batre was awarded $15.67 million to develop 194
single-family modular homes built using cement fiber materials. The one and two bedroom layouts
are immediately deployable as temporary housing, while the three and four bedroom layouts could
be permanently installed and are UFAS compliant. Homes are transported on one truck and can be
deconstructed and reset on another foundation. In terms of siting, Bayou La Batre proposed
building a disaster housing group site, outside the storm surge zone, that can also serve as a
permanent sub-division for families. The state claimed that this project gained substantial
community support.
Cypress Cottage Partners Project, Louisiana. Cypress Realty Partners were awarded $74.54 million to
develop and manage 475 infill housing units in four locations: the Treme neighborhood, Jackson
Barracks, Lake Charles, and Abbeville. The project designed two housing models, the Katrina
Cottage (single family home with 2 and 3 bedroom layouts) and the Carpet Cottage (one story
multifamily offering 1, 2, and 4 bedroom layouts). Cypress promoted these multiple layouts as
allowing for the provision of disaster housing to a diverse population. A partnership between
Cypress Group and Lowe’s created production capacity to build and deploy these Cottages quickly.
Finally, the state sought to facilitate affordable homeownership of these cottages through the
eventual decommissioning of units for use as permanent housing.
Green Mobile Project, Mississippi. Referred to as the Mississippi Eco-Cottage, this project was awarded
$5.89 million to create 100 energy efficient and affordable housing units that can serve as temporary
or permanent dwellings. Eco-Cottages emphasized innovative site design, green building
technologies, durability, and interior design that can be adapted to a variety of family needs.
Additionally, plans were non-proprietary, allowing the designs to be used nationwide.

16

Department of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General, OIG-07-39, “Evaluation of the Federal Emergency
Management Agency’s Alternative Housing Pilot Program,” April 2007.
17
FEMA, Fact Sheet – Awards, “Selected Grant Awards for Alternative Housing Pilot Project,”
www.fema.gov/media/fact_sheet/ahpp_awards.shtm

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
Heston Group Project, Texas. The Heston Group was awarded $16.47 million to construct 250 singlefamily, pre-fabricated, panelized housing units. Featured designs were two, three, and four bedroom
layouts, all UFAS compliant, which can each fit into an 8’ x 20’ shipping container. The Heston
Group maintained that these housing units could be transported by truck, barge, or train, ensuring
quick delivery. Additionally, units could be pre-positioned, stored flat, and reused. Finally, Heston
Group boasted that these houses could be constructed in 8 hours by a 6 person crew, with minimal
skills and training needed.
NOTE: The Heston Homes project was unsuccessful because of design flaws in the units
produced and the inability of the Heston Group to perform to its contractual requirements. For
further information, please see Appendix A.
Mississippi Alternative Housing Program.18 The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency (MEMA)
was granted $281 million to build 3,100 housing units. The main models developed were the Park
Model, a one bedroom, 400 sq ft unit, and the Mississippi Cottage, two and three bedroom units
between 728 and 840 sq ft. All units feature hurricane straps and anchor attachments for added
protection against storms and are wind resistant up to 150 mph. Alternative housing units will be
placed on individual lots, commercial group sites, or other multifamily sites identified by non-profit
organizations or local governments

18

Mississippi Emergency Management Agency, Mississippi Alternative Housing, www.mscottage.org/reservist

14

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #3: Obstacles to Implementing Temporary to Permanent Housing: A 
Case Study of the Alternative Housing Pilot Program in Louisiana & 
Mississippi  
What ultimately arose out of the projects implemented by the Alternative Housing Pilot Program were
housing models that could be created for use as immediate emergency housing, but could also be
transitioned into permanent housing. This idea of “temp to perm” disaster housing received much
positive attention from state housing and emergency management officials, but was met with strong
resistance on the part of local public officials and communities. Ultimately, this resistance created many
challenges to realizing the full potential of the AHPP projects as long-term recovery solutions.

Cypress Partner Project, Louisiana19 
In November 2008, the National Building Museum held a lecture in which representatives from the
Louisiana Recovery Authority (LRA) and Cypress Realty Partners evaluated the Cypress Partner Project
implemented through the AHPP. Their evaluation is discussed below.
FIRST STEPS – OCTOBER 2005 TO DECEMBER 2006
Through the Mississippi Renewal Forum convened in October 2005, Andres Duany and Marianne
Cusato created the Katrina Cottage model, designed to be a safe, affordable homes that could be
designed and built for less than the life cycle cost of temporary FEMA travel trailers and mobile
homes. Lowe’s Home Improvement then partnered with Cusato to design 15 different floor plans
and material packages for Mississippi and Louisiana customers to select from and purchase. Katrina
Cottages ranged from 500 to 1500 square feet.
During the winter and spring of 2006, the LRA launched a community planning initiative,
conducted through a series of citizen-outreach meetings, called “Louisiana Speaks.” Through
Louisiana Speaks, over 27,000 citizens participated in the creation of long-term plans for rebuilding
their communities in a manner that is safer, stronger, and more sustainable. In March 2006, six
months prior to FEMA’s announcement of the AHPP, Louisiana Speaks meetings led by Andres
Duany were held in Lake Charles, Abbeyville, and St. Bernard Parish, where stakeholders engaged
in planning and design charettes. Through this process a pattern book was published with the
architectural and design specifications agreed upon by the public. Then, once the AHPP guidance
was released, LRA issued a Request for Ideas (RFI) that required applicants to be responsive to
these designs.
Cypress Realty Partners, which had already purchased Katrina Cottages for development of an infill
site in Old South Baton Rouge, responded to the RFI. They assembled a submission team of
Andres Duany, Marianne Cusato, Lowe’s as the material providers, and Worthington Industries as
the steel framing provider. Their submission included seven different home designs, incorporating
several models from the Katrina Cottage series, as well as a multifamily design. Cypress also
reached out to the local leadership that participated in Louisiana Speaks in order to get public
support for the designs. In December 2006, the Cypress Partner Project was awarded $75 million
19

National Building Museum, Community in the Aftermath Lecture, November 2008

15

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
from FEMA and the governor selected the Louisiana Housing and Finance Agency to administer
the program.
CYPRESS UNITS – SITING, DESIGN, MATERIALS, & COST
Designs. All designs are “temp-to-perm,” meaning they can be used for short term temporary
housing and then transitioned to permanent housing. Additionally, all homes are designed to be
easily expanded.







Design #1: 612 sq ft, two bedroom, one bath; can be expanded to 1,080 sq ft
Design #2: 910 sq ft, three bedroom, one bath; can be expanded to 1,800 sq ft
Design #3: 936 sq ft, two stories, two bedrooms, 1.5 bath; can be expanded to 1,200 sq ft
Design #4: Expanded version of design #1 – 1,080 sq ft, three bedroom, two bath
Design #5: 1,112 sq ft, three bedroom, two bath; ADA compliant
Design #6 & 7: Single story multifamily structures; ADA compliant
o Six different sizes, from a 655 sq ft one bedroom, one bath to a 1,220 sq ft three
bedroom, two bath

Materials. The Cypress partner project chose to use materials that were hurricane resistant as well
as energy efficient. First, the units utilized HardiPlank, a fiber cement siding for exteriors that has a
50 year warranty. Second, steel framing was installed, to withstand Category 4 strength winds as
well as resist possible rot and mold. Third, double paned window with insulated glass that
suppresses radiated heat flow. Finally, appliances were installed that meet Energy Star standard for
energy efficiency. Additionally, for infill lots in New Orleans, Cypress is using Structurally Insulated
Panels (SIPs), which are energy efficient and durable.
Siting. Contract with LRA is for three new group site communities in Jackson Barracks, Lake
Charles, and New Orleans. Jackson Barracks was slated for 59 single family and 32 multifamily
cottages, the Fields Neighborhood of Lake Charles had 34 larger single family cottages planned, and
the Fischer Housing Development in New Orleans was slated for 124 single-family homes. In
addition to group sites, Cypress planned to create 36 scattered site, modular homes in Lake Charles
and 137 scattered site, modular homes in New Orleans. Finally, Cypress planned to develop 42
single-family homes in an infill subdivision in Hidden Cove, Baton Rouge and 27 single-family
modular homes in an infill subdivision in Harbor Estates, Westwego.
Cost. The seven housing types range in cost from $100,000 to $135,000, which is inclusive of
everything from foundation, steel framing, materials, labor, and site infrastructure.
CHALLENGES IN IMPLEMENTING PROJECT
In March 2008, Governor Jindal moved the administration of AHPP over to the LRA. Upon taking
over the program, the LRA identified the following on-going challenges:
Obtaining suitable sites for construction. AHPP was predicated on developing both group sites
on raw land as well as infill sites in New Orelans. For the group sites, the LRA received resistance
from local communities in getting appropriated sites that were environmentally acceptable. For the
16

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
infill sites, adjudicated properties were not held free and clear, thus making the process to obtain
those properties very lengthy.
Constitutional impediments. State of Louisiana prohibits the transfer of property from one state
entity to another without going out to public auction. This hampered the LRA’s ability to use
former FEMA temporary housing sites and transform them into permanent communities. In the
end, infill properties were purchased by the state through their Road Home Program in conjunction
with the New Orleans Redevelopment Authority.
Misconceptions. Local officials and the public did not understand that the project was a
permanent housing solution. Additionally, a stigma persisted that the AHPP units would lower the
property values of the surrounding neighborhood.
HOUSING PROGRESS20,21
Jackson Barracks: $16 million project. Infrastructure design and environmental assessment
completed October 2008, infrastructure bids completed November 2008, and construction began
December 2008. Cypress has completed full infrastructure to site and construction of the 59 singlefamily homes and is currently constructing the remaining 32 multifamily units.
Fields Neighborhood, Lake Charles: $4.3 million project. Subdivision approved in September
2008, infrastructure design and environmental assessment completed December 2008, construction
began February 2009. Cypress has completed construction on all 34 single-family homes.
Fischer Housing Development, New Orleans: $18 million project. Cypress is currently
completing partial infrastructure to site and constructing the 124 single-family homes.
Lake Charles Scattered Sites: $4.8 million project. Cypress is currently constructing and placing
the 36 single-family modular homes.
New Orleans Scattered Sites: $20 million project. Cypress is currently constructing and placing
approximately 137 single-family modular homes.
Harbor Estates, Westwego: $3.4 million project. Currently constructing and placing 27 singlefamily modular homes.
Hidden Cove, Baton Rouge: $5.3 million project. Infrastructure design and environmental
assessment completed January 2009, construction began March 2009. Cypress has completed
construction on all 42 single-family homes.

20

Louisiana Housing Pilot Program, Powerpoint Presentation, “Alternative Housing Pilot Program,” November 2008
http://lra.louisiana.gov/assets/docs/searchable/meetings/2008/11/111808AHPP.pdf
21
Cypress Realty, “FEMA Alternative Housing Pilot Program in Louisiana,”
http://www.cypressgroupdc.com/Projects.php

17

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Mississippi Alternative Housing Program22 
FEMA established an interagency agreement with HUD to evaluate the Alternative Housing Pilot
Program (AHPP). FEMA contracted with Abt Associates Inc. to conduct this evaluation and in
February 2009, the first case study was published, assessing the Mississippi Alternative Housing
Program (MAHP) administered by the Mississippi Emergency Management Administration (MEMA).
In Mississippi, 3,075 cottages were constructed and over 2,800 were deployed by MEMA. These
cottages were designed to be converted to permanent use. However, despite the cottages’ disasterresistant construction and high quality, many municipalities have banned or severely restricted the
permanent placement of cottages on the mistaken assumption that these cottages are indistinguishable
from mobile homes. Examples of excessive restrictions on cottages include veto power of any resident
within 160 feet of a proposed cottage site, requirements of pre-Katrina title and homestead exemption,
and prohibitions against conversion to rental use. Additionally, in some cities such as Gautier, even the
largest cottages fall short of zoning codes which mandate homes in residential areas to be at least 1,325
square feet.
Despite advocacy efforts and litigation, the conversion of individual cottages to permanent use remains
stymied by case management complications, prohibitive elevation and foundation costs, and local
government opposition. As a result, only 42% of cottages have been converted to permanency and
only 31% in Hancock County, where the largest amount of cottages were originally placed.
FIRST STEPS
MAHP adopted the Incident Command System (ICS) management approach, which was organized
around five major functional areas: command, operations, planning, logistics and finance, and
administration. MAHP immediately established detailed goals and performance standards to
support the program’s vision and codified them in a Performance Management Plan (PMP). Within
the first three months of receiving the AHPP funding, MEMA had created a new organization
focused solely on MAHP, conducted outreach to over 14,000 families, and negotiated MOUs with
14 local governments.
A headquarters office was established in Gulfport, along with a transition site for the receipt of
Cottages. Additionally, MAHP established smaller field offices in Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson
Counties for the use of site inspectors. MEMA contracted with engineering consulting firm PBS&J
to provide management and technical support to MAHP. Significant operational, financial, and
administrative support was also provided by the State Department of Finance and Administration
(DFA). Finally, MAHP coordinated closely with the Governor’s Office of Recovery and Renewal.
PARK MODEL & MISSISSIPPI MODEL COTTAGES
Manufacturing & Installation. Once cottage designs were complete, MAHP issued an RFP and
held pre-bid conferences with interested manufacturers. MAHP procured units from six different
vendors operating in 10 separate locations. Although the original RFP called for manufacturers to
transport the Cottages directly to the sites and install the units themselves, MAHP determined that
22

“Developing a More Viable Disaster Housing Unit: A Case Study of the Mississippi Alternative Housing Program.”

18

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
a separate haul and install contract would be negotiated and that a transition site would be needed
to hold the units. A transition site allowed for the inspection and repair of units and was needed
when sites were not yet ready for installation. Direct contracting with local haul and install
contractors also allowed MAHP to have more control over timing and ensure that installation was
coordinated with permitting and applicant preparation.
Quality Management. Upon arrival at the Gulfport transition site, each unit received close visual
inspection to check construction features, paint, kitchen and bathroom fixtures, and functionality of
windows and doors. Utilities and appliances were tested. While all manufacturers were required to
use materials of equal quality, the quality of the finished product varied considerably. Numerous
discussions were needed amongst MAHP staff and manufacturer representatives.
MAHP staff paced deliveries and deployments so that fewer than 300 units would be at the
transition site at any given time. An inspection of units by FEMA and HUD experts in December
2007 determined that MAHP accessible units did not meet UFAS and changes had to be made to
the specification of future units, but no retrofitting of existing units or exchanges were made.
Eligibility & Application. Permanent resident of Hancock, Harrison, or Jackson counties who
were currently residing in a FEMA provided travel trailer or mobile home were eligible applicants
for MAHP. There was no application process for the program, as eligible participants were
automatically registered for the program by MEMA. Then, through a proportional random
selection process individuals were selected and notified by phone and mail.
Outreach & Selection. A call center was established in Gulfport to contact the 14,000 selected
families and demand turned out to be much smaller than initially assumed. The call center had
difficulty reaching applicants using FEMA’s contact information database and many letters were
returned as undeliverable. Due to the Governor’s insistence, a second call center was opened in
Jackson to take questions about the program and an attempt to hand deliver the 2,000 returned
letters was made. Demand remained low in the three coastal counties causing the program to be
expanded in early 2008 to include Pearl River and George Counties.
CHALLENGES IN IMPLEMENTING TEMPORARY HOUSING
Local Resistance. Due to the overwhelming demands of recovery on local authorities, many
officials did not see housing as an immediate priority, instead focusing efforts on restoring the basic
infrastructure and economy of the community. Some community resistance was related to
misperceptions about MAHP units – bringing in more “temporary” disaster housing to an area that
already had been pushing to remove the FEMA trailers was seen by local communities as
contradictory and detrimental to rebuilding permanent housing. Additionally, local leaders, having
seen FEMA give multiple extensions for travel trailer occupancy, feared that a similar extension
process for the Cottages was inevitable, even after assurance by MAHP of a March 2009
demobilization deadline.
Additionally, communities expressed concerns about Cottages not fitting with the style and size of
many neighborhoods. Local officials argued that small Cottages would do less to restore the tax
base than larger, more expensive homes or condos. Finally, MAHP’s proposal to develop a group
site met the most resistance of all. Possible recreation of the aesthetic and social problems caused
19

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
by the FEMA trailer parks made communities very concerned and as a result, MAHP ultimately
used existing commercial mobile home parks in all 14 jurisdictions.
Memorandum of Understanding. Entering into MOUs with each jurisdiction turned out to be
more difficult and time consuming that MAHP staff initially expected. MOUs were tailored to meet
the needs of each jurisdiction, with modifications focusing on concerns regarding the quality of
units, unit installations, and the use of units for permanent housing. Many communities limited the
possibility of placing MAHP units by only permitting units on private residential lots, only
approving units where a FEMA travel trailer previously existed, requiring applicants to provide
evidence that they were rebuilding a permanent unit in order to obtain a permit, or authorizing
placement of units only where local zoning allowed modular or manufactured homes.
MAHP staff and contractors were frustrated by the differing requirements across jurisdictions.
Additionally, many jurisdictions frequently modified their requirements and did not always
communicate these changes with MAHP staff. At the same time, local jurisdictions were frustrated
by MAHP’s lack of knowledge about jurisdictional boundaries.
Site Approval & Installation. The biggest constraint on program participation was the availability
of an eligible site. However, upon finding a site, additional challenges arose. MAHP housing
advisors were teamed with applicants to explain program requirements, assist them in obtaining
permits from local jurisdictions, and filling out several complex forms. Site approval challenged
MAHP organizationally, as a lack of coordination between PBS&J inspectors and housing advisors
led to confusion regarding which sites and which applicants had completed the necessary steps for
approval. The result was a backlog of cases where housing advisor tasks were completed and
inspector tasks were not or vice versa.
Coordination issues also arose after the sites were approved, as haul and install contractors,
inspectors, housing advisors, applicants, building officials, and the utility company all had to work
in tandem to make the unit ready for occupancy. Additionally, MAHP found that some
manufacturer installation instructions were unclear and had to be modified.
Occupancy Standards & Maintenance. Initially MAHP established occupancy standards to
simulate disaster standards, but realized that these did not work well for a pilot program
implemented two years later. A liberalization of standards frustrated participants who had received
their units prior to the decision, as families of the same size were now receiving larger units.
For the move-in process, housing advisors again had to walk applicants through complex
documents, including the Lease Agreement, Maintenance Agreement, and Right of Entry/IngressEgress Statement. It was difficult to determine whether a particular maintenance problem was a
warranty item that would be handled by the manufacturer, or a non-warranty item to be handled by
a MAHP selected contractor. Additionally, the responsibilities of the participant when it came to
maintenance differed between the FEMA and MAHP programs, causing confusion (MAHP
required residents to address routine, minor maintenance needs, FEMA did not).
TRANSITION TO PERMANENT HOUSING

20

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
MAHP anticipated that Cottages would be converted from temporary to permanent housing by
installing units on permanent foundations or incorporated into multifamily rental developments.
However, local governments were resistant to these permanent housing projects and especially to
the concept of developing group sites. Additionally, the organizational start-up and temporary
housing activities alone were greater priorities for the first nine months of the program. Thus,
minimal attention was given to planning for the transition to permanent housing until April 2008.
Once an emphasis was placed on permanent housing, MEMA’s first step was to draft an RFP to
procure the project management role. The Hagerty Consulting Group was chosen for their housing
development policy expertise. Next, engineering specifications were developed for the permanent
foundations and installation design and procedures were revisited. Additionally, MEMA worked
with the state legislature to amend a statute, which allowed MEMA to sell, transfer, or lease units to
non-profit organizations.
CHALLENGES TO PERMANENT HOUSING TRANSITION: APRIL 2008 – AUGUST 2008
The Disposition Plan. In designing the Dispositions Plan, Hagerty Consulting encountered
difficulty in accessing reliable and updated information of MAHP participants because the
information collected by housing advisors during their monthly visits was never entered into the
MAHP database for analysis. Specifically, MAHP did not have current income information to
determine what types of permanent housing resource participants could afford.
Compliance. One of the impediments to transition to permanent housing was that during the
temporary housing phase, roughly 300 Cottages had been placed in Coastal High Hazard Areas
(Velocity-Zones). However, FEMA prohibited the permanent installation of Cottages in these
areas, meaning that all units would have to be demobilized. Another challenge concerned elevation
- IRC specifies that Cottage elevations may not exceed 5’7’’; however federal elevation regulations
were changed after Katrina to require a much higher elevation. This effectively prohibited
permanent installation of Cottages, even if participants owned their own land. Additionally, cost of
elevation was also a feasibility issue, with MAHP estimating an additional $10,000 per unit to
elevate a unit 5’7’’, on top of the $20,000 base installation cost. It is possible that this cost would be
passed onto the participant purchasing the unit.
Community Approval. Obtaining local jurisdiction approvals was a technical challenge, as
participants have to comply with local zoning and code requirements. For example, above ground
utility lines that were acceptable for temporary units were not permitted long-term. Other units had
to be moved to meet local set-back requirements that were previously waived. In some jurisdictions,
two structures cannot remain permanently on the same lot, so owners were forced to choose
between continuing to repair their damaged home or keeping their Cottage.
Several jurisdictions have 1,000 sq ft minimum requirements for residential units, which disqualified
both the Park Model and the Cottages. In response, Habitat for Humanity launched a pilot program
in Hancock County to pursue options for adding additions to the Cottages to mitigate this
requirement.
By the summer of 2008, Hancock, Harrison, and Jackson County approved permanent placement
of MAHP units, but only for areas zoned for mobile, manufactured, or modular homes. Some
incorporated jurisdictions, such as Biloxi, Pass Christian, and Gautier remain adamant that no
21

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
Cottages will be permanently placed, regardless of location. Many local leaders made these decisions
having never personally seen the inside of a Cottage. Additionally, many communities, given their
experience with FEMA, were not convinced that the MAHP demobilization deadline was real,
assuming MAHP would extended deadlines for residents who were not finished rebuilding. Others
feared that Cottages would remain permanently by default.
Homeownership Program. MAHP staff reported that participants were very frustrated with the
lack of information about a purchase plan. In June 2008, MAHP undertook a Permanent Housing
Survey to figure out the needs of program participants. Survey findings revealed that of the 1,166
pre-disaster homeowners and 636 pre-disaster renters, 72% and 92% respectively were interested in
purchasing their Cottage. However, about ¾ of both groups indicated that they could only afford
to pay between $0-$400 per month in mortgage, utilities, taxes, and insurance. Based upon MAHP
preliminary estimate that $400 is the minimum threshold for ownership expenses (maintenance,
taxes, insurance, utilities) other than the purchase price, it appears that a significant number of the
interested occupants would not be able to afford a Cottage, even if it were provided mortgage-free.
In addition to the lack of affordability of the unit, MAHP required anyone who purchased a unit to
maintain homeowner/hazard insurance on the unit and if required, flood insurance, creating yet
another expense. Thus, for many program participants, their only option was to pursue financing
from a lending institution. However, with low incomes and poor credit scores, many found it
difficult to secure financing. Additionally, many lenders have minimum required loan amounts for
their existing products that were higher than the amounts needed by participants.
FURTHER IMPEDIMENTS TO PROGRESS: NOVEMBER 2008-AUGUST 2009
November 2008-February 200923,24
In November 2008, Hancock County had 1,147 cottages still in use: 138 cottages in Bay St. Louis,
210 in Waveland, 121 in Pass Christian, and 678 in unincorporated Hancock County. MEMA
officials pleaded with incorporated jurisdictions to extend the deadline for removal of cottages past
March 31, 2009 so that program participants could have the opportunity to convert their cottage
into permanent housing. Although Gulf Coast Housing Director Gerald Blessey acknowledged that
permanent housing efforts had not moved as quickly as anticipated, MEMA was offering to sell
cottages to residents on a sliding scale, based on income, with prices ranging from $500 to $26,000.
If allowed by these jurisdictions, the cottages would be removed from their trailer beds and placed
on permanent foundations as modular homes. Once this has occurred, the cottages meet all
building code standards that apply to modular homes.
However, the Bay St. Louis and Waveland City Councils and the Hancock County Board of
Supervisors all voted to remove all MEMA units from residentially zoned neighborhoods by the
March 31, 2009 deadline and to only allow residents to buy their cottages in the few areas zoned for
mobile home parks and commercial parks. City Councilmember’s claimed the cottages were
staunchly opposed by constituents who had rebuilt their permanent pre-disaster homes and thought

23 Dwayne Bremer, “Cottage Crisis Looming,” The Sea Coast Echo, November 21, 2008. Retrieved from the
Mississippi Center for Justice, http://www.mscenterforjustice.org/news-article.php?article_id=92
24
Dwayne Bremer, “Bay Council says cottages must go,” The Sea Coast Echo, December 17, 2008. Retrieved from the
Mississippi Center for Justice, http://www.mscenterforjustice.org/news-article.php?article_id=90

22

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
the cottages would decrease neighborhood property values. Many cottage residents did not want to
move into commercial parks and current parks have little vacancies.
March-June 200925
In response to outcry by program participants, the Mississippi Center of Justice rallied eight cottage
residents to sue the City of Waveland, stating that the Board adopted ordinance restricting future
use of cottages was unfair and forced residents from living within the jurisdiction. On June 3, 2009,
the Waveland Board voted to rescind 15 of the 16 restrictions. However, this only affected the 30
cottages remaining in the city, as the new placement of cottages remained prohibited. 26
As the March 31st deadline loomed closer, MEMA began to remove cottages from these
jurisdictions, placing them in temporary storage sites, including Gulfport where 670 cottages now
lay vacant. As of June 2009, 1,800 families remain in temporary cottages and 20,000 families were
still living in temporary FEMA trailers and apartments.
August 2009
Table 1: Mississippi Cottage Conversion Rate27
Occupied
September
Approved
2008
Buy
Hancock
1,077
330
Harrison
934
438
Jackson
750
368
Other
42
31
Coastwide
2,803
1,167

to

Percent
Retained
31%
47%
49%
74%
42%

Many community organizations, who had been promised allocation of cottages for owner-occupied
and rental uses, continued to face challenges with the tangled approval and compliance processes
imposed by federal and state agencies. These organizations included: Enterprise Corporation of the
Delta, Mercy Housing and Human Development, Habitat for Humanity, and the North Gulfport
Community Land Trust.
In the end, many individuals who applied for purchase of a permanent cottage are still waiting with
uncertainty, as the state has delayed developing long-term solutions, not in small part due to local
government restrictions and their refusal to grant permits or alter zoning codes.
HOUSING PROGRESS:
Community Organizations. In early 2008, a renewed interest in acquiring Cottages among
community organizations surfaced. This likely stemmed from the Mississippi Development
25

Spencer S. Hsu, “Permanence Eludes Some Katrina Victims: Many Still Live in Trailers, Rentals,” The Washington
Post, June 13, 2009.
26
Dwayne Bremer, “Waveland will allow cottages to stay,” The Sea Coast Echo, June, 3, 2009. Extracted from the
Mississippi Center for Justice, http://www.mscenterforjustice.org/news-article.php?article_id=108
27
The Steps Coalition, “Hurricane Katrina: Has Mississippi Fallen Further Behind?: Trends and Challenges in
Mississippi’s Disaster Recovery,” Updated September 2009.

23

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
Authority’s reallocation of $241 million in CDBG funding from the Homeownership Assistance
Grant Program to the Long Term Workforce Housing Program (LTWHP). LTWHP provides
grants and loans to non-profit and for-profit organizations to help develop long term affordable
housing and a second and third rounds of funding were released April 2008 and September 2008.
In July 2008, MAHP initiated a Letter of Interest application process for community organizations
to propose permanent housing projects.
Some organizations have seen success in placing MAHP units. Habitat for Humanity worked with
Lexington Homes, one of the cottage manufacturers, to design an addition to the units. They
received approval from Hancock County to site these units, with the expanded square footage, in
infill lots. Additionally, Renaissance Development Corporation is working to provide relocation and
permanent placement for all 300 Cottages that were temporarily installed in Velocity Zones, starting
with 40 approved in Hancock County.
Housing Choice Vouchers. In December 2007, Housing Choice Voucher funds previously
obligated by the Mississippi Regional Housing Authority (MHRA) were freed up, enabling MHRA
to partner more actively with MAHP on permanent housing efforts. First, MAHP transitioned all
323 Cottages in commercial mobile home parks to the South Mississippi Development Corporation
(SMDC), a nonprofit subsidiary of MHRA. SMDC will lease the units and MHRA will offer
Vouchers to current commercial park occupants. Second, MHRA has proposed three new
permanent developments using 227 new and refurbished Cottages, owned and managed by SMDC
as rental housing. Units will be available to families that have Vouchers and also to market-rate
renters. Finally, MRHA through SMDC, is taking ownership of 80 units of Eco Cottages sited in
Picayune.

24

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #4: Evaluating existing models for providing permanent 
replacement housing to victims of natural disasters 
This section of the Plan evaluates the federal government’s response to the need for permanent
housing options to replace damaged or destroyed housing following a natural disaster. While policy
actions were taken following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita to utilize both single family as well as
multifamily rental and homeownership solutions, gaps remain in the ability to finance permanent
replacement housing.

Findings 
FEDERAL ASSISTANCE AFTER THE 2005 HURRICANE SEASON28
Background. After Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, federal assistance for the repair or replacement of
permanent housing was made available to homeowners and rental property owners in three forms:
grants, loans, and tax incentives. Those programs serving homeowners only included the
Individuals and Households Program: Repair or Replacement Assistance and the Home Disaster
Loan Program. Programs serving homeowners or renters included the CDBG program, the
Hazard Mitigation Grant Program, and some tax incentives. Programs serving renters only included
the Capital Fund Emergency/Natural Disaster Funding, GO Zone LIHTCs, Physical Disaster
Business Loan, and Public Assistance for Permanent Work.
State Use of Permanent Housing Financing. To make CDBG funds available for the repair and
replacement of permanent housing, both Louisiana and Mississippi created new programs for
homeowners and small rental property owners:
Louisiana created the Road Home Homeowner Program for homeowners to rebuild their homes
on their own property or sell their property and relocate. Also created was the Road Home Small
Rental Property Program which made forgivable loans in two funding rounds. At first funding
came as a reimbursement, but in December 2008, an up-front financing option was added.
Mississippi created the Homeowner Assistance Program for homeowners that sustained flood
damage. Also created was the Small Rental Assistance Program for owner in Hancock, Harrison,
Jackson, and Pearl River Counties. Four types of assistance were provided, including: rental income
subsidy, repair or reconstruction of Katrina-damaged property, reconstruction or conversion
reimbursement of non-Katrina-damaged property, and new construction reimbursement. Finally,
Mississippi created the Long Term Workforce Housing Program to provide grants and loans to
local governments, non-profits, and for-profit organizations to provide long term affordable
housing stock, benefiting households earning 120% AMI or less.
Challenges to Receiving Permanent Housing Financing. Homeowners and rental property
owners faced challenges in applying for and use federal assistance. Challenges included gaps in
28

US Government Accountability Office, Report to Congressional Requesters, GAO-10-17, “Disaster Assistance:
Federal Assistance for Permanent Housing Primarily Benefited Homeowners; Opportunities Exist to Better Target
Rental Housing Needs,” January 2010.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
financing needed to complete repairs, delays in the availability of funds, and adverse economic
conditions, including high insurance premiums, high construction costs, and tightening credit
markets.
Public Housing Authorities (PHAs) also faced considerable challenges in obtaining funding for the
recovery of public housing units. Although 80% of the 7,000 public housing units in New Orleans
were damaged by Hurricane Katrina, less than $30 million was made available for damages to all
PHAs nationwide through the Capital Fund Emergency/Natural Disaster Funding Program.
Results of Permanent Housing Allocation. In both Louisiana and Mississippi, more homeowner
units were damaged than rental units, but the proportional damage to rental stock was greater.
However, federal assistance addressed the repair and replacement needs of 62% of damaged
homeowner units, but only 18% of damaged rental units. Federal programs provided assistance to
303,000 homeowner units, compared to 43,000 rental units and 115,000 homeowner units received
funding from two or more programs. Louisiana and Mississippi awarded roughly $11 billion of their
CDBG funds to homeowner programs while only allocating $1 billion to the owners of small rental
properties. For example, demand for the Road Home Small Rental Property Program was 7 to 8
times what the funding could support. Additionally, the completion of CDBG-funded small rental
units in Louisiana and Mississippi has been very limited, with only 14% of 10,115 rental units in
Louisiana and 25% of 4,242 rental units is Mississippi complete as of August 2009.
PKEMRA CHANGES PERMANENT HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES29
Before passage of the Post-Katrina Emergency Management Reform Act (PKEMRA) in October
2006, direct assistance for permanent housing was limited to “insular areas outside the continental
United States and in other remote locations when alternative housing resources are not available.”
FEMA’s rationale was that repetitive repairs to homes in a vulnerable area were not sound
investments of federal aid and that construction of permanent, disaster resistant housing was
economically sensible.
However, PKEMRA amended this section of the Stafford Act by adding “semi-permanent” to the
type of housing that could be constructed, and by striking the term “remote,” in order to
substantially broaden FEMA’s options in considering temporary housing alternatives in certain
situations. PKEMRA also create the Individuals and Households Pilot Program (IHPP) for FEMA
to lease private apartment units and make repairs to those units. Repairs to multifamily rental
housing stock could now be considered by FEMA as an alternative permanent housing solution to
single family rental or homeownership options.
FEMA’S INDIVIDUALS AND HOUSEHOLDS PILOT PROGRAM (IHPP)30
Background. Following the passage of PKEMRA, IHPP was created by FEMA to evaluate the
efficacy and ability to provide timely and cost-effective housing to individuals and households

29

McCarthy, Francis X. CRS Report to Congress, “FEMA Disaster Housing: From Sheltering to Permanent Housing,”
Congressional Research Service 7-5700, September 16, 2009.
30
Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Individuals and Households Pilot Program: Fiscal
Year 2009 Report to Congress,” May 19, 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
affected by a disaster through the use of repair to multifamily rental property. The pilot was tested
in Cedar Rapids, IA following May 2008 tornadoes and in Galveston, TX after Hurricane Ike.
Lease Agreement. FEMA required property owners to modify the standard lease to include the
provision that the monthly rent for the FEMA applicant would be $0. This was done to facilitate
the transition of applicants to long-term or permanent housing at the end of the contract period.
Applicants may choose to stay at the property and enter into a standard lease agreement with the
owner. In Cedar Rapids Iowa, the Cedar Valley apartment owner agreed to $0 leases in exchange
for FEMA funding repairs to 7 units and paying operating costs for 14 months. In Galveston
Texas, the Carelton Courtyard apartment owner agreed to $0 leases in exchange for FEMA repairs
to 32 units and paying operating costs for 30 months.
Cost Comparison. FEMA compared the cost of repairs and monthly operating cost of each unit
against the cost of providing manufactured homes under Section 408. FEMA used acquisition,
installation, and monthly maintenance costs for manufactured homes for the comparison.




Iowa Pilot
o Cost of Providing 7 Manufactured Homes - $439,376
o Cost of Pilot Repair to 7 Units - $76, 854
o Savings to Federal Government - $362,522
Texas Pilot
o Cost of Providing 32 Manufactured Homes - $2,650,624
o Cost of Pilot Repair to 32 Units - $897,358
o Savings to Federal Government - $1,753,266

FEMA NATIONAL DISASTER HOUSING STRATEGY – PERMANENT HOUSING
On January 16, 2009, FEMA released the final version of the National Disaster Housing Strategy, which
has a Disaster Housing Community Site Operations Annex. This Annex states that FEMA is responsible
for closing group sites and assisting households in transitioning to permanent housing.31 However
the annex is lacking several important pieces of information relating to how this transition will
occur. First, the Annex does not explain how other federal or state agencies will be involved in
completing tasks associated with transitioning a group site household to permanent housing and
what mechanisms will be used to ensure that victims can find a permanent housing unit. For
example, unlike the 2007 FEMA Gulf Coast Recovery Office Housing Action Plan, the annex does
not specify HUD’s role in transitioning families to permanent housing.
Additionally, neither the Strategy nor the Annex address the cost of helping households transition
to permanent housing, the staffing resources needed to complete this task, the type of training that
should be provided to staff, or the source of resources necessary to achieve FEMA’s goal of closing
group sites and transitioning families to permanent housing. This is a step backwards from the
efforts made by FEMA’s Transitional Recovery Offices in Mississippi and Louisiana to develop
housing plans that discussed the resources needed for transitioning from group sites. Finally, the
Strategy does not describe or anticipate the challenges associated with helping people find
permanent housing after a natural disaster.
31

US Government Accountability Office, GAO-09-796, “Disaster Housing: FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and
Performance Measures to Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters,” August 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

The absence of detailed information in the Strategy and its annex on the partnerships that FEMA
needs to form, the resources it needs, and the mechanisms that FEMA is to use to address the
challenges specific to a disaster when closing group sites and transitioning households to permanent
housing can lead to delays in helping disaster victims return to more stable and conventional living
arrangements. 32

32

US Government Accountability Office, GAO-09-796, “Disaster Housing: FEMA Needs More Detailed Guidance and
Performance Measures to Help Ensure Effective Assistance after Major Disasters,” August 2009.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #5: Designing alternatives to existing models to improve the 
sustainability, affordability, desirability, and quality of housing rebuilt in 
the event of future natural disasters 
Findings 
In the wake of recent natural disasters, among the many lessons learned is the need for more effective
and extensive pre-disaster mitigation measures, including housing practices to help reduce the
likelihood of property damage and loss of life. A study by the Multi-Hazard Mitigation Council (MMC)
for FEMA found that every $1 spent on loss prevention saves taxpayers an average of $4 in future
reduced losses.33 Coming up with disaster resistant housing models before the next high-impact disaster
occurs has become a key priority. Additionally, creating innovative design strategies to create disaster
resistant homes includes looking to thinking outside the box, to incorporate best practices in the field
of energy efficiency and sustainability.
WAYS TO MAKE HOMES MORE RESISTANT TO DISASTERS
1. Promote and support smarter and safer construction practices and home improvements,
particularly measures that increase the structural integrity of homes and protect them from
water intrusion.
2. Utilize technologies and other practices that can mitigate flood damages.
• Dry floodproofing: help create waterproof or water-resistant seals around the exterior of the
home.
• Wet floodproofing: serves to make uninhabited parts of the home (garages, unfinished
basements) resistant to flood damage.
• Elevation: raising major home appliances and the electrical system (electric panel board,
service lines, wiring, outlets, etc.).
3. Promote measures and products for mitigating severe wind and rain34:
• Wind-resistance for the envelope of the home include the installation and reinforcement of
thicker, sturdier roof coverings, installation of secondary water barriers beneath the roof
covering, use of pressure resisting windows, use of a pressure resisting garage door, and
installation of storm shutters.
• Measures to provide wind-resistance for the uplift load path include roof deck connection
to framing and connectors for continuous load path from roof to foundation.
• Wind-resistant measures for the Lateral Load Path include sheathing for shear walls and
anchorage for shear and overturning.

33

Multi-Hazard Mitigation Council of the National Institute of Building Sciences, “Natural Hazard Mitigation Saves:
An Independent Study to Assess the Future Savings from Mitigation Activities,” December 2005.
34
Hurricane Risk Mitigation Leadership Forum Series, “Presentations - Texas Risk Mitigation Leadership Forum”
http://www.mitigationleadership.com/newsite/presentations.cfm?f=TRM

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
4. Develop and enforce better building codes, zoning ordinances, and land use planning strategies
at the local level. FEMA only updates floodplain maps periodically and new developments built
in and around floodplains can increase the area at risk of flooding (increasing impervious
surfaces).
• Utilize ‘Code Plus Programs,’ such as IBHS (Fortified for Safer Living & Fortified for
Existing Homes) or FLASH (Blueprint for Safety).
• Implement continual updates to statewide residential building codes. The Texas Legislature
mandated municipalities adopt the 2006 International Residential Code (IRC) and
International Building Code (IBC).
HOW PRIVATE INDUSTRY CAN HELP CREATE DISASTER RESISTANT HOUSING
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Develop cost-effective products and construction methods
Work with designers to utilize cost-effective techniques
Work with builders
Develop construction aids – Document to allow construction of affordable housing without
having to hire an engineer (example - Simpson Strong Tie’s High Wind Framing Connection Guide).
Work to incorporate new technology into building codes
Work with retailers
Educate consumers
Partner with non-profit organizations with similar interests

LINKING EFFORTS TO IMPROVE DISASTER RESISTANCE & ENERGY EFFICIENCY
Solutions in Action
Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin.35After enduring repeated flooding of the Kickapoo River, the village
worked with the Army Corps of Engineers to relocate its downtown using federal disaster
recovery funds. Originally, the Army Corps proposed constructing a levee however the levee
would have cost $3.5 million more than the total assess value of all property in the floodplain.
Therefore, the city chose to relocate 24 apartments, 10 houses, and 30 businesses and built the
new downtown as a solar village, with all buildings heated by solar energy. Additionally, several
homes in the flood-prone area were raised above the 100 year floodplain and the floodway was
converted to a riverside park and recreation area. The total relocation cost was roughly $7
million, compared to the $8 million projected cost for the proposed levee.
Greensburg, Kansas.36After a tornado struck the town in May 2007, Greensburg developed a
reconstruction plan that incorporated both disaster resistant and energy efficient elements into
new homes. The non-profit group Greensburg GreenTown set up the “Chain of Eco-Homes
Competition” in 2009. Besides incorporating disaster resistant and eco-friendly elements,
applicants were required to keep the buildable design cost under $110 per square foot. Over 250
teams from 38 states and 13 countries entered designs and 12 eco-homes were chosen and have
initiated construction. These 12 homes feature a variety of building techniques, prices, sizes,
35

David Salvesen, Emergency Management Institute. Federal Emergency Management Agency “Breaking the Disaster
Cycle: Future Directions in Natural Hazard Mitigation” 2003.
36
HousingPolicy.org “Linking Disaster Resistance and Energy Efficiency,”
http://www.housingpolicy.org/toolbox/strategy/policies/distrest_energeff.html?tierid=113297

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
energy efficiency features, and green living products and services. One design, the Silo EcoHome37, has been completed and two more, the Meadowlark House38 and the EcoHomestead39, are in progress.
Chesapeake, Virginia.40 The 1998 FEMA-sponsored Wind Summit inspired a public/private
partnership to create a hurricane resistant home called the Hurricane House. Created by Jack
Jackson, it is a display home at the Estates Carriage House (single family community) in
Chesapeake, Virginia. Built with wood frame construction and has insulation values that are
higher than is typical in the region (R-15 walls, R-19 floors, R-30 in the roof). Hurricane House
also includes numerous additional features to increase hurricane resistance and energyefficiency, including: wind-resistant doors, double-glazed, laminated windows, a 12-inch thick
reinforced-concrete ceiling but to withstand 250 mph winds, and a "safe room" that doubles as
a walk-in closet. Finally, Hurricane House also incorporates some alternative construction wall
assemblies can provide substantial strength for hurricane resistance while also delivering
inherent energy efficiency gains.
Gautier, Mississippi. In October 2005, Habitat for Humanity International launched the
demonstration phase of its “home in a box” initiative, as part of Operation Home Delivery.
This initiative sought to mobilize partners across the country to build house frames, package the
frames in shipping containers, and send them into Hurricane Katrina affected areas.41 One of
the demonstration models, called ecoMOD, was a partnership between the University of
Virginia and the Habitat for Humanity of the Mississippi Gulf Coast. The ecoMOD team
designed an energy efficient and environmentally sustainable prefabricated home, with an
emphasis on natural ventilation, thermal efficiency, and cost-savings strategies for materials.42
The prototype is built from an innovative steel and foam panel system that is highly insulated
and resists hurricane –force winds and mold. Besides placing the roof and windows in a way
that encourages natural ventilation, the house also incorporates a photovoltaic solar panel array
for hot water and a heat pump/heat recovery system for heating and air conditioning. The
1,087 square foot, three bedroom home, built with sweat equity, cost approximately $65 per
square foot.
STATE DISASTER MITIGATION FINANCING – BEST PRACTICES
My Safe Florida Home Program43 - My Safe Florida Home Program was established in 2006
through a $250 million appropriation by the state. It was administered by the Department of
Financial Services, which oversees activities and allocates funding. The program provided free
hurricane mitigation inspections for single-family homes and grants to households to fund
mitigation retrofits. It targets low- and moderate-income households, providing grants only to
37

Greensburg GreenTown, “Silo Eco-Home,” http://www.greensburggreentown.org/silo-eco-home/
Greensburg GreenTown, “Meadowlark House,” http://www.greensburggreentown.org/meadowlark-house/
39
Greensburg GreenTown, “Homestead House,” http://www.greensburggreentown.org/homestead-house/
40
Christina B. Farnsworth, “Building for Disaster Mitigation,” Home Energy Magazine, January/February 2000.
41
Habitat for Humanity, “Hurricane Response: Habitat receives unprecedented help in an unprecedented effort,”
http://www.habitat.ca/hurricanekatrinaresponsec54.php
42
John Quale and Kristina Iverson, “A Sustainable Housing Response to Hurricane Katrina,” Cityscape: A Journal of
Policy Development and Research, Vol. 10, No. 3, 2008.
43
My Safe Florida Home, “About the My Safe Florida Home Program,”
http://www.mysafefloridahome.com/abouttheprogram.asp
38

31

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
homes with insured values under $300,000. From 2006 to 2009, the program has provided free
inspections to more than 400,000 homeowners and has funded retrofits for nearly 33,000 homes.
However, due to budget constraints, the program expired on June 30, 2009.
South Carolina Hurricane Damage Mitigation Program (SC Safe Home Program)44 Established by the Omnibus Insurance Reform Act of 2007, the SC Safe Home Program offers
grants to residents for making their homes more resistant to the damaging effects of high winds
from hurricanes and severe storms. The program is operated by the South Carolina Department of
Insurance, the Program provides grant dollars to individual homeowners to make their property
more resistant to hurricane and wind damage.
SC Safe Home Program is funded through a percentage of the premiums collected from the state's
Wind Pool, which is an association of insurance companies which makes disaster insurance
available to homeowners in the coastal area who are not able to buy it through the standard
insurance market. Funds can be used for the following mitigation improvements/retrofits
including: roof deck attachment, secondary water barrier, roof covering, bracing gable ends,
reinforcement of roof-to-wall connections, opening protection, exterior doors, including garage
doors, tie downs, problems associated with weakened trusses, studs and other structural
components, and repair or replacement of manufactured home piers, anchors and tie-down straps.
Similar to the My Safe Florida Home Program, the SC Safe Home program provides grants only to
low- and moderate-income households and to homes with insured values under $300,000. To date,
the program had provided 600 grants to homeowners in the state totaling $3 million. Homeowners
completing mitigation projects funded through the program have reported savings of up to 24
percent in their property insurance premiums.

44

South Carolina Department of Insurance, “About SC Safe Home,” http://www.scsafehome.sc.gov/About/

32

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #6: Encouraging the participation, coordination, and involvement of 
appropriate federal organizations 
UTILIZING FEDERAL RESOURCES TO MAKE HOMES MORE RESISTANT TO NATURAL
DISASTERS
Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) Program (FEMA)45
The Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program provides cost-effective investments before disasters occur to
reduce the vulnerability of communities in the future. The range of eligible projects includes
retrofitting public buildings, acquiring and relocating properties out of a flood plain, elevating
structures, flood-proofing public buildings, developing mitigation plans, etc. However, PDM can
only be used for mitigation projects, not disaster preparedness. A 2007 CBO report on PDM noted
a proportional cost savings benefiting two FEMA programs: its disaster relief programs and its
National Flood Insurance Program
In FY2008 Congress appropriated $114 million to 149 grantees, 79% of which were planning
grants.
State and local cost share is 25% of the grant. Then, starting in FY2009, Congress directed FEMA
to implement a state minimum of $500,000 for eligible projects, making PDM both a competitive
and formula-driven program. Additionally, Congress gives out directed grants (earmarks) through
PDM, which accounted for 27% of the total PDM appropriation for FY2009.
Projects undertaken with PDM funds46:
Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) District Mitigation Project. Used grant to raze the above ground
portion of BART’s Train Operations Center and move the operations underground to mitigate
earthquake damage
Barry County, Michigan Hazard Mitigation Plan. County developed an inventory of natural hazards
affects its communities and created a mitigation plan to identify natural hazards, assess
vulnerability, and develop methods to eliminate effect of hazards.
Mid-Columbia & Southeast Oregon Hazard Mitigation Planning Initiative. Planning process engaged
communities to identify risks and develop mitigation actions that address infrastructure and
service needs, specific land uses, engineering standards, and building codes.
San Francisco Medical Center Seismic Saw-Cut Project. Used grant to install a seismic expansion joint
between the Medical Center and the Medical Science Building.
Pima, Arizona, Canada del Oro Acquisition Project. Grant funded the voluntary acquisition of 50
single family homes, mobile homes, and commercial properties in the Canada del Oro Valley
floodplain to be converted into permanent open space.
45

Francis X. McCarthy and Natalie Keegan, Congressional Research Office, CRS Report 7-5700, “FEMA’s PreDisaster Mitigation Program: Overview and Issues,” July 10, 2009.
46
Federal Emergency Management Agency. “In Action -- The Pre-Disaster Mitigation Grant Program.” 2006.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Darlington, Wisconsin Plan and Acquisition Project. From 2002 to 2006, grants funded flood proofing
of 19 commercial buildings, and the acquisition and removal of 14 buildings situated in a
floodplain.
Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP)(FEMA)
The Hazard Mitigation Grant Program provides funding specifically after a disaster to implement
mitigation measures to help reduce damages to public or private property from future disasters.
FEMA can offer states up to 15% of the total disaster recover grants it has awarded them and can
fund up to 75 percent of the eligible costs of each project. States or local grantees must provide a
25 percent match, which, as with the PDM Program, can come from non-federal sources or CDBG
program funds. Eligible uses are similar to those under the PDM program.
Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) Program (FEMA)
The Flood Mitigation Assistance Program provides funds for projects that reduce or eliminate the
long-term risk of flood damage to buildings, homes, and other structures that are insured under the
National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). Similar to the PDM and HMGP, FEMA provides 75
percent of the funding for eligible costs, and the grantee is responsible for the other 25 percent.
Disaster Recovery Enhancement Fund (HUD)47
In June 2009, HUD announced the $312 million Disaster Recovery Enhancement Fund (DREF),
created to encourage states to undertake long-term disaster strategies that focus on reducing the risk
of damage from future natural disasters. This fund is reserved for states that spend their CDBG
funds on specific disaster recovery activities likely to reduce the extent of damage in the future.
These projects may include: Buyout payments for homeowners living in high-risk areas; optional
relocation payments to encourage residents to move to safer locations; home improvement grants
to reduce damage risks (property elevation, reinforced garage doors and windows, etc.); improving
and enforcing building codes; and developing forward-thinking land-use plans that reduce
development in high-risk areas.
To be eligible for DREF, the individual mitigation measure must mitigate and/or reduce risk
beyond the pre-disaster condition. DREF funds cannot be used as a substitute or match for FEMA
HMGP funds and can only be used in counties officially covered by a disaster declaration in 2008.
POSSIBLE FUTURE FEDERAL FINANCING SOLUTIONS
Weatherization Assistance Program48 - During the current Congressional session, Senator
LeMieux introduced S.2818 which would amend the Energy Conservation and Production Act
47

US Department of Housing & Urban Development, News Release, “DONOVAN ANNOUNCES $64 MILLION IN
DISASTER ASSISTANCE TO FLORIDA: $312 million available to encourage States to reduce damages from future
disasters” June 10, 2009.
48
Open Congress, “S.2818 - A bill to amend the Energy Conservation and Production Act to improve weatherization
for low-income persons, and for other purposes,” http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-s2818/show#bill_list

34

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
(ECPA) to allow incentives for energy-related home retrofitting activities that are hazard mitigation
home improvements. The bill would increase the amount of allowable expenditures to low income
homeowners from $6,500 to $8,500, for retrofit projects which would result in both disaster
resistance and energy efficiency improvements.
HOME STAR Program (Cash for Caulkers)49- Introduced by the White House in March and
passed by the House in May, the Home Star bill would use rebates and tax incentives to spur more
Americans to make their homes energy efficient. It would also improve home resistance to
natural disasters. “Silver Star Rebates,” provide up to $1,500 per household for upgrades to
insulation, duct sealing, water heaters, HVAC units, windows, roofing, and doors. “Gold Star
Rebates,” provide up to $3,000 per household for a whole home energy audit and subsequent
retrofit tailored to achieve 20% energy savings.
Predisaster Hazard Mitigation Enhancement Program50 - Introduced in June 2009 by
Representative Bennie Thompson, H.R. 3027 purpose is to amend the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, to provide grants to eligible entities to assist hazard
mitigation strategies that save lives, improve the structural integrity of property affected by natural
disasters.
Hazard Mitigation For All51 - Introduced in June 2009 by Representative Bennie Thompson,
H.R. 3026 purpose is to amend the United States Public Housing Act of 1937 to establish a
predisaster mitigation program to benefit public and assisted housing residents, improving the
resilience of resident-inhabited residential structures to withstand storms and other natural disasters,
through restoration, reconstruction, replacement, or retrofit initiatives in advance of such storms
and disasters. Additionally, this program is to be used only for residents of assisted housing whose
family incomes do not exceed 80 percent of area median income.

49

The White House, Office of the Press Secretary, “Fact Sheet: Homestar Energy Efficiency Retrofit Program,”
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/fact-sheet-homestar-energy-efficiency-retrofit-program
50
Open Congress, “H.R.3027 - Predisaster Hazard Mitigation Enhancement Program Act of 2009,”
http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111-h3027/text
51
Open Congress, “H.R.3026 - Hazard Mitigation For All Act of 2009,” http://www.opencongress.org/bill/111h3026/text

35

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Chapter #7: Recommendations for the rapid and efficient large­scale 
production of temporary and permanent replacement housing following a 
natural disaster 
In preparing this Plan, the Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Advisory Committee (the
“Advisory Committee” or the “Committee”) organized its recommendations in two main categories:
recommendations for policies and practices to be established before a natural disaster strikes and
recommendations for immediate and long-term recovery following a natural disaster. The Advisory
Committee acknowledged the pitfalls of previous attempts to bifurcate post-disaster recommendations
into temporary housing and permanent housing proposals and instead chose to address them as part of
a single process in the long-term recovery of disaster victims. Additionally, the Advisory Committee
agreed that the implementation of these recommendations requires extensive involvement at the local
administrative level, focused chiefly through Councils of Governments (COGs).

Pre-Disaster Recommendations
Overarching Recommendations
Currently, the federal authorities, as well as the funding allocations for immediate disaster recovery
versus long-term disaster recovery, are on separate trajectories. Immediate response to a natural
disaster is primarily administered by and coordinated through FEMA at the federal level, and the
Department of Public Safety’s Division of Emergency Management (DEM) at the state level. The
local levels of government chosen by DEM and FEMA to allocate this funding and undertake predisaster planning are the city and county governments. These city and county governments create
Local Emergency Management Plans (LEMPs), which must be approved by both FEMA and DEM
in order for that jurisdiction to receive disaster funding.
In contrast, the long-term housing rebuilding effort undertaken after a natural disaster is primarily
administered and coordinated through HUD at the federal level and, as designated by the Governor,
the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) and the Texas Department of
Rural Affairs (TDRA) at the state level. The local level of government designated by the Governor,
included in the development of an Action Plan by TDHCA and TDRA, and approved by HUD to
allocate this long-term funding and undertake long-term housing reconstruction planning is the
COGs. The affected COGs develop, in a public participation-driven process, Methods of
Distribution (MODs), which must be approved by TDHCA and HUD for housing projects in order
for that COG and/or the subrecipients it has designated to receive CDBG disaster funding.52 This
entire process is informed by the State of Texas analysis of impediments to fair housing choice (the
“AI”).
These two processes, one for immediate recovery and the other for long-term rebuilding, have yet to
be coordinated in a cohesive manner. The Committee believes that in order to prepare effectively for
and respond to a natural disaster, local entities must work together to create a continuum of
52

Texas Department of Rural Affairs & Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs, Plan for Disaster
Recovery – Revised Amendment No. 1, Revised May 25, 2010.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
assistance from pre-emergency mitigation planning to long-term housing reconstruction, with strong
linkage and open channels of thoughtful communication at all stages of the recovery effort. Thus, the
Committee’s overarching recommendations are in large part directed towards recommendations that
will create stronger connections between these interrelated disaster recovery efforts at the local level,
ensuring more efficient and effective communication and partnership between local city and county
jurisdictions and their respective COG.
1. A. Extend existing Local Emergency Management Plans to include long-term housing
reconstruction policies and guidelines.
Instead of these local jurisdictions undertaking a completely new planning effort, which could be
costly and time consuming, the Advisory Committee decided that their recommendations should be
programmed into existing local planning efforts. Particularly, the Advisory Committee saw an
opportunity to insert the recommended policies found within this chapter into the existing LEMPs
required by the Texas Department of Public Safety’s DEM.53 This would extend the LEMPs to
address the full continuum of pre-emergency to long-term housing planning and procedures.
The components of these long-term housing plans are discussed further in Recommendations #2-6.
1. B. COGs should provide technical assistance to local jurisdictions in the creation of the
long-term housing reconstruction portion of their LEMPs. COGs should also be required to
show that they have utilized these LEMPs when creating their Methods of Distribution
(MODs) or applying for funding under competitive state and federal disaster programs.
The Committee recognizes that cities and counties may not have the staff capacity or the technical
expertise to complete long-term reconstruction planning on their own. Additionally, the Committee
recognizes the cost of preparing such plans and the need to provide a financial incentive for them to
expand their LEMPs to include such long-term housing reconstruction solutions. Therefore, the
Committee recommends that COGs should take the lead in orchestrating technical and financial
assistance to local jurisdictions in their development of long-term housing reconstruction plans.
Furthermore, each COG will produce an Emergency Housing Procedures Manual to serve as a
standardized set of procedures that jurisdictions can turn to when implementing their LEMPs after
natural disasters. The components of this Manual are discussed further in Recommendation #7.
As a financial tool to provide incentives to undertake this process, the Committee recommends
utilizing the state’s annual CDBG allocation (separate from CDBG disaster recovery funding),
particularly through the creation of a $1 million annual set-aside within the Planning and Capacity
Building Fund54 for ‘Disaster Housing Reconstruction Planning.’ Through a phased process, each
year four COGs would receive $250,000 each to allocate toward Local Emergency Management
Planning efforts as well as the creation and maintenance of the Emergency Housing Procedures
Manual.

53

Texas Department of Public Safety, Texas Division of Emergency Management, “Local Emergency Management
Plan and Annexes” http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/dem/pages/downloadableforms.htm#annexindex
54
Texas Department of Rural Affairs, “Planning Fund,”
http://www.tdra.state.tx.us/TxDRA/programs/TxCDBGhomepage/txcdbgGrants/pcb.aspx

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
Finally, in order to ensure that the planning efforts conducted by local city and county jurisdictions
are recognized and considered by the appropriate COG when that COG is applying for state and
federal disaster funding, the Committee recommends that COGs be required to show how their
Methods of Distribution (or other application) reflect and adhere to the vision and intent of the local
jurisdictions, as laid out in their LEMP’s housing reconstruction plans.
Implementing Overarching Recommendations
2. As part of the long-term housing planning effort, risk assessment and cost benefit analysis
of mitigation approaches should be undertaken at the local level.
The Advisory Committee acknowledged that prior to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, at-risk
communities in Texas were largely unaware of how vulnerable their housing stock was to damage or
complete destruction by a natural disaster. Although substandard housing conditions had become
prevalent in many local jurisdictions, these entities had not conducted a risk assessment of their
housing stock.
“But one of the key points that she [Chula Sanchez] left out that they really should be
applauded for was in cooperation with the city they actually really pushed for hazard mitigation
and elevating these homes to two foot above the base foot elevation. But that actually needed a
lot of community buy in. So that even though the City Council didn't necessarily adopt the two
foot above base foot elevation, all these homes that are to be reconstructed within the City of
Galveston and furthermore, any homes to be elevated within the City of Galveston will be
elevated to two foot above base foot elevation.” –Matthew Erchull, CMD, City of Galveston
The Advisory Committee recommends that communities incorporate pre-disaster assessment and
mitigation efforts in their LEMPs. The first step in the assessment would be extensive data gathering
on the number of owner-occupied, rental, and accessible units for special needs populations that are
substandard or otherwise at risk of damage from a natural disaster. This should include an exposure
assessment, using information from the Texas Department of Insurance to identify and establish and
inventory of those households in areas prone to flood and windstorm damage that are uninsured.
Additionally, part of this data gathering process would include calculating the value of losses to the
residential stock.
Some COGs have already gathered some of this data through their Mitigation Action Plans. A
FEMA-approved Mitigation Action Plan is required for eligibility for grant funding through FEMA’s
pre-disaster grant programs (discussed in Recommendation #3). Local jurisdictions are encouraged to
incorporate their region’s Mitigation Action Plan into the risk assessment portion of their LEMPs.
Additionally, upon assessing those housing units at greatest risk of damage, the Committee
recommends that the local entities create a referral process to connect households to the Texas
Windstorm Insurance Association to assess wind and hail insurance. The Advisory Committee wants
to ensure that this risk assessment process not have the unintended consequence of triggering code
enforcement activity in a manner that could result in the loss of housing for many individuals and
families, predominantly families of lower income.
3. Local jurisdictions should be encouraged to apply for federal mitigation grants.
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

The Advisory Committee discussed several federal funding sources for disaster mitigation that could
be obtained by local communities, including: 55






Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP)
Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM)
Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA)
Repetitive Flood Claims (RFC)
Severe Repetitive Loss (SRL)

Table 1: Eligible Activities by Program56
Eligible Activities

HMGP

PDM

FMA

RFC

SRL

1. Mitigation Projects
Property Acquisition and
Structure Demolition
Property Acquisition and
Structure Relocation
Structure Elevation
Mitigation Reconstruction
Dry Floodproofing of Historic
Residential Structures
Dry Floodproofing of Nonresidential Structures
Minor Localized Flood
Reduction Projects
Structural Retrofitting of
Existing Buildings
Non-structural Retrofitting of
Existing Buildings and Facilities
Safe Room Construction
Infrastructure Retrofit
Soil Stabilization
Wildfire Mitigation
Post-Disaster Code
Enforcement
5% Initiative Projects
2. Hazard Mitigation Planning
3. Management Costs

































































































First, the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) provides funding following a Presidential major
disaster declaration to prevent or reduce future losses to lives and property through the identification
55

US Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, “FY 2011 Hazard Mitigation
Assistance (HMA) Unified Guidance,” http://www.fema.gov/library/viewRecord.do?id=4225
56
US Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, “FY 2011 Hazard Mitigation
Assistance (HMA) Unified Guidance,” http://www.fema.gov/library/viewRecord.do?id=4225

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
and funding of cost-effective mitigation measures and the minimizing of costs of future disaster
response and recovery. This program is administered at the state level by the Texas Department of
Public Safety.
Second, the Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) program provides funding for mitigation projects that
produce a sustainable reduction in risk to people and property from natural hazard events or for
planning activities that deliver a FEMA-approved local mitigation plan. PDM grants are awarded
annually, and small impoverished communities may be eligible for up to a 90 percent Federal cost
share. Third, the Flood Mitigation Act program was created to assist States and communities
implement measures that reduce or eliminate the long-term risk of flood damage to buildings,
manufactured homes, and other structures insured under the National Flood Insurance Program.
Fourth, the Repetitive Flood Claims (RFC) program has a goal of reducing flood damages to
individual properties for which one or more claim payments for losses have been made under flood
insurance coverage and that will result in the greatest savings to the National Flood Insurance Fund
(NFIF) in the shortest period of time. Finally, the Severe Repetitive Loss (SRL) program has a goal of
reducing flood damages to residential properties that have experienced severe repetitive losses under
flood insurance coverage. SRL is potentially the most useful of the mitigation grants as regards
housing, as it allows housing replacement, similar to the CDBG Owner Occupied program. SRL and
FMA are managed by the Texas Water Development Board.
A mitigation project that consistently ranks highly in the State mitigation grants are property
acquisition/demolition projects; commonly known as ‘buyouts’. Counter-intuitively, the buyouts,
which destroy houses, are actually a housing assistance program, and are the assistance that is
available soonest after the event. Affected citizens receive pre-flood market value for their damaged
house, and take those funds to quickly move on, purchasing or renting existing vacant housing in the
area.
The Advisory Committee encourages local jurisdictions to apply for these relevant funding sources.
The Committee also recommends that the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Texas Water
Development Board conduct outreach to disaster-prone areas, to educate local public officials on the
availability of these five funding opportunities. The Texas Department of Public Safety’s applicant
briefings on the availability of HMGP funding can be a model for this outreach.
4. Local jurisdictions should be required to have a contingency plan for pre-approval of thirdparty entities to conduct expedited permitting and inspections.
Public input received during the community roundtable process revealed that one of the biggest
obstacles to the rapid housing reconstruction after a natural disaster was the lengthy process of
obtaining the initial building permit and then once the home was completed, having it inspected and
approved for occupancy. Many jurisdictions are not able to operate at full capacity immediately
following a disaster and are overwhelmed by the volume of permitting and inspections requests
received by homeowners seeking to rebuild their properties.
“I think we also have a lot of challenges with local ordinances and permitting processes and
getting that streamlined before a disaster so that we know that after a disaster something
different is in place if that's needed. A good example would be just the timing for the permit
process for some of the repairs, having an expedited process…And I think along with that,
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
more efficient systems for rebuilding and new homes that need to be brought in in a recovery
situation and making sure that process is expedited for permitting.” Amanda Timm, Executive
Director, Local Initiative Support Corporation
“And our suggestions are some -- and one -- for example, there are residential inspectors in
place, licensed by the State of Texas. After an emergency hits, the community should be able to
use them.” – Sunny K. Philip, City Manager, City of La Feria & Representative of South Texas
Collaborative for Housing Development
Therefore, the Committee first recommends that jurisdictions create a pre-approved set of criteria
that a housing design must meet in order to receive a permit, as mentioned in Recommendation #2.
Second, the Committee recommends that the jurisdiction pre-qualify professionally certified
inspectors to act on behalf of the jurisdiction. This can be accomplished through an
intergovernmental agreement with another city, to supplement government staff working on
permitting and inspections in the event of a disaster. An alternative would be to subcontract with
private inspectors, entering into pre-positioned contracts for private inspectors to fulfill the
responsibilities or permitting and inspections for a set time frame following a disaster. Either option
ensures that, in the event of a disaster, qualified personnel would have already been selected and
would be able to take immediate action.
Alternatively, in large disaster events that result in a federal declaration, stricken communities can
request code enforcement support from the State through the Public Works Response Teams
(PWRTs). These PWRTs are coordinated and deployed by the state but use local public works
personnel that make themselves available outside their normal jurisdictions under state control.
5. Local jurisdictions should create an agreement with Texas Historical Commission to preapprove an expedited historical clearance for repair and rehabilitation of historic properties.
Under the Antiquities Code of Texas, project sponsors are required to obtain permits from the Texas
Historical Commission (THC) for work proposed on designated historic buildings. Additionally, state
and federal historic preservation laws require that qualified professionals be employed on historic
preservation projects. Property owners and project sponsors have legal responsibilities when:
• A project involves federal funds, licenses, permits, or approval;
• Project land is owned or controlled by a state agency or an political subdivision of the state;
and
• A historical designation or covenant requires review of proposed work.57
The Advisory Committee recommends that local jurisdictions create an agreement with the THC that
if certain historic property is damaged beyond an identified threshold (40-50%), then the local
jurisdiction has the authority to automatically demolish and reconstruct the property. Those
properties meeting an exceptional historic standard, such as a property on the Federal Historic
Register, would be exempt from this agreement and would still go through review by the THC.

57

Texas Historical Commission, “Finding & Hiring Qualified Historic Preservation Consultants,”
http://www.thc.state.tx.us/publications/guidelines/HiringPresConsul.pdf

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
6. Local jurisdictions and COGs should adopt the “Hurricanes Ike and Dolly Round 2
Housing Guidelines” as the pre-approved, clear, standardized set of procedures for case
managers to use to direct homeowners through each step of the rebuilding process.
Housing reconstruction can be a lengthy and confusing process, with many mandatory rules and
regulations to follow. Additionally, case managers are not always versed in the rebuilding process and
are forced to learn as they go. Furthermore, if these regulations changes midway through the
rebuilding process, it leads to frustration and delay.
“Another issue that was touched on earlier that we have seen affect the recovery dramatically is
the issue of heirship and clear title and property tax issues. They are extremely prohibitive in
low income communities to the recovery process. And I know that we really see a major
hurricane preparedness initiative in helping families resolve their estate issues and getting folks
on payment plans for property taxes because that's what holds the system up, and when they're
dealing with a lot of other stressors that come after a storm, it is very difficult to work through
that process. One of our rough figures is, just from our home repair process, about 50 percent
of the houses that applied for assistance could not get assistance through the public sector
resources that were available because of proof of ownership issues, tax issues, clear title, things
like that.” - Amanda Timm, Executive Director, Local Initiative Support Corporation
“It takes too long to get the word out. It takes too long to let the people know what the
resources are. After a while, you don't even know who is out there that still needs help…
So we need to find a better way to disseminate that information when funds become available.”
- Lina Mendez-Romero, Administrator, Brownsville Housing Authority
“And there needs to be some understanding at the State level, a guidebook saying that if the
community wanted to take the step further, and help out their own residents, these are the
things you need to follow.” - Sunny K. Philip, City Manager, City of La Feria & Representative of South
Texas Collaborative for Housing Development
“A lot of the people that we're dealing with, whether it be a mobile home unit or now with the
Galveston County or City of Galveston or Harris County program, they really are over their
heads. I guess there's a better way of saying it. They do need some training, they need some
assistance. You were talking about the case management. They need some case management.”
– William Sullivan, Sullivan Interests, Ltd
“But if there's one issue that I would like to hit: there's so many agencies and it's almost like it
takes forever to get anything done. And I know the homeowner says that. But I can say, as
somebody who's been involved with all the agencies, that it's kind of crazy…Whatever you do,
please try to put it in clear terms so that when it goes down people will understand it.” –Jim
Hall, Nehemiah’s Vision
In order to educate both the case manager and the displaced homeowner, the Committee
recommends that local jurisdictions and COGs adopt the “Hurricanes Ike and Dolly Round 2
Housing Guidelines,” developed through the Conciliation Agreement process, as a uniform set of

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
guidelines outlining each step in the rebuilding process.58 These Guidelines include information on:
qualifications and eligibility for federal funding, damage assessment of home, timeline for rebuilding,
title/deed requirements, legal referral, permitting process, elevation requirements, choices for housing
models, inspection processes, etc.
The Committee recommends that these Guidelines be agreed upon/approved by the local jurisdiction
as the definitive protocol in the instance of a disaster. Additionally, these guidelines should be
translated into multiple languages.
7. COGs should create an Emergency Housing Procedures Manual, to be used by local
jurisdictions for the implementation of housing rebuilding programs. As part of the
Emergency Housing Procedures Manual, COGs should work with local architects to prepermit a set number of housing designs and pre-bid the winning designs to contractors.
Moving beyond the local planning efforts, the Committee saw a need for a standardized set of
procedures that jurisdictions can turn to when implementing a housing rebuilding program.
Therefore, they recommended that each COG create an Emergency Housing Procedures Manual to
serve as these uniform guidelines.
As part of the Procedures Manual, the Committee wants to ensure that the construction of homes
following a disaster is efficient, but also meets the community’s standards concerning quality and
aesthetic. Therefore, the Committee recommends that prior to a disaster, COGs release a Request for
Qualifications (RFQ) to local architects for housing reconstruction designs. These designs would be
required to meet essential engineering and aesthetic specifications. Once these designs had been
vetted through a public input process and the governing entity had chosen a set of housing designs
and layouts (1 bedroom, 2 bedroom, etc.), they could be reviewed for advanced permitting and
windstorm approval by the Texas Department of Insurance.
Upon permitting, these designs can then be submitted to contractors for bidding. These bids would
serve as a basis for contingency contracts for a five year period and could be renewed. The Advisory
Committee found that pre-bid contracts would be more cost effective than post-disaster bidding,
when jurisdictions are less able to negotiate and more susceptible to the price demands of
developers. However, the Committee acknowledged that supply costs are subject to change following
a disaster and may have to be renegotiated, or a separate third-party supplier contract entered into.
“We can gear up housing faster than any industry, quicker than any industry because we can
utilize so many plants, you know, across Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, wherever. We can always
tap product from somewhere. Knowing that a disaster is coming in if we have pre-qualified
specs then we can already have those houses built.” - Tommy Blanchard, World Wide Homes
In some arenas, use of pre-procured contractors has proven successful. Prior to Hurricane Ike, the
Houston-Galveston Area Council (H-GAC) was able to pre-negotiate contracts for debris removal
through a cooperative purchasing program. Each local jurisdiction within the H-GAC was able to
pick a contractor from a pre-qualified list. The contracts were then tested during the 2008 hurricane
season, and the process was found to be very successful.
58

Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs, CDBG Disaster Recovery, “DRAFT Round 2 Housing
Guidelines,” http://www.tdhca.state.tx.us/cdbg/ike-and-dolly/index.htm

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Pre-Disaster Recommendations Requiring Legislative Action
8. County governments should be granted the authority to enforce residential housing codes
for disaster purposes in wind zone, storm surge, and floodplain areas.
Residential housing codes create a high standard for the durability of housing stock and help to
ensure that homes are resistant to natural disasters. Without the ability to enforce building codes,
jurisdictions are left vulnerable to the creation of housing stock that is built to lower standards and
is more likely to suffer damage in a natural disaster that other homes, built to building codes, could
generally withstand.
“You have the reverse problem, you have no codes to enforce also in the unincorporated areas,
so anything can get built.” –Carol Borrego, Fort Bend County Community Development
“And in your choosing, if you have not done that yet, what's specifically geared toward a project
that is rural? Because rural - there are more rural in Texas than there are metropolitan areas.
And the rules are different…Codes set aside, in most, no, in every part of 1,000 square miles of
Polk County you can bring a manufactured home and drop it anywhere you want to.” - Larry
Shine, President of Texas Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster
Currently, county governments are not required to adopt residential housing codes, such as the
International Residential Code (IRC). The IRC was adopted as the municipal residential building code
for the state of Texas in 2002, setting design and construction standards for one- and two-family
dwellings. The Advisory Committee recommends that the IRC standards be enforced at the county
level in regions identified as floodplains, wind zones, and storm surge areas.
It should be noted that while counties (less than 250,000) in population do not themselves have code
enforcement authority, they may enter into an inter-local agreement to allow member incorporated
communities to enforce their local building codes within the 1.7 mile extraterritorial jurisdiction
boundary. This can partially reduce the amount of unregulated space in a county.
9. The Texas State Data Center should undertake a statewide Geographic Information
Systems (GIS) planning effort, to pull together variables useful for disaster housing
reconstruction planning.
Many local jurisdictions do not have the financial capability or expertise to consolidate multiple data
sources on the effects of a disaster and the damage caused or to map these variables. Therefore, the
Committee recommends utilizing the Texas State Data Center to map this information. Particularly,
looking at historical data on the number of owner-occupied, rental, and accessible units for special
needs populations that were damaged or destroyed by previous natural disasters, the vulnerable
geographic areas identified by FEMA and DPS, FEMA damage claim data, Texas Department of
Insurance and Texas Windstorm Insurance Association data on insured and uninsured
homeowners, and Census data on the demographic characteristics of low income households and
those living in substandard housing.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Post-Disaster Recommendations
10. Encourage local jurisdictions to engage in partnerships with organizations that can
provide immediate assessment of damage and housing need, such as the faith based
community and the architecture community.
As identified in the testimony given during the community roundtables, many volunteers are
strategically positioned following a natural disaster to aid the government through a rapid needs
assessment. Following Hurricane Ike, the Texas chapter of the American Institute of Architects
immediately set up a temporary office to field requests to help with damage assessments.
“Just within two months after the storm Mario's on the sea wall opened and it was the only
meeting room. And a group of architects from Houston came to me because I was displaced in
Houston, and said, Chula, what can we do to help. Three of those architects had projects in
Biloxi with the program there so they knew about design build, getting it built on budget on
time. And then we came and this is exactly what they wanted to talk about, rebuilding fast,
efficient, culturally appropriate, all those things…And so from that and the involvement with
those architects at the University of Houston Architecture School, and then later, the University
of Texas San Antonio Architecture Department came here. And over the course of the past
almost two years they have catalogued existing conditions, they've designed homes very specific
to the program. We've presented those for the Recovery Program.” –Chula Sanchez, Architect,
Chair of the U.S. Green Building Council for Galveston County
Similarly, faith based groups organized through the Southern Baptist Convention, Southeast Texas
Interfaith Organization (SETIO), and Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster (VOAD)
conducted a widespread needs assessment and started case management services within days of the
disaster.
“What works very well is working very well through VOAD is that there are groups that do
case management. There are groups that do assessments. There are groups that do the actual
rebuild part. And when we work in concert together, what happens is, you have the assessments
coming in with the names, addresses, phone numbers and all of that. Then you have the people
such as United Methodists who do a great job with the case management. Then they start
working the case management aspect of it. And then when it comes out to the other side, they
say, okay. We have this family, this family, this family. They are ready for a house…So there is
a whole process there; we are able to work through VOAD to make it a concert. And that is our
goal, is to bring everybody together.” - Jim Richardson, Disaster Relief Director, Southern Baptists of
Texas Convention
“As a long-term recovery organization we begin to solicit applications immediately. We'll put
an outpost in the affected area. We'll put signs all over the community, in the business places
and the churches, so that people know that they can come and sign up to get help. By the time
the first FEMA officials are ready to start talking, we've already gathered 4- to 500 applications
for assistance. Our crews are already on the ground.” – Bob Williamson, Southeast Texas Interfaith
Organization

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
“If you really want to find out, you know, what the communities want you've got to pass the
incident management part of recovery directly into the hands of the communities, the
nonprofits, the CDCs. FEMA has been working diligently to wash their hands and get out of
the housing business. They're not an agency that is in housing. If you look at their mission,
they don't that's not what they're there for. But the communities, the grassroots organizations
know what each community needs. They know most of them want to move back into what they
lost. The second thing the nonprofits can help with is they can prioritize very easily where
from a case management point of view who needs what first.” – Michael Morgan, President/CEO,
Critical Response Networks
The Advisory Committee recommends utilizing these organizations to quickly triage the damages to
the community’s housing stock, identify which units can be salvaged, and identify which individuals
and families have been displaced.
11. Local jurisdictions should work with FEMA’s case management contractors to ensure
a continuity of case management services.
Quality case management is key to ensuring that a displaced family understands the housing options
available to them and is able to obtain that housing. However, previous disaster recovery efforts
have been hampered by fragmented case management. Faith based organizations provide case
management immediately following a disaster. Once the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) is
allocated to local jurisdictions, case management services are turned over to FEMA’s contractors,
typically local non-profit organizations.
“You know, today you go to talk to people and you say, ‘You need to talk to your case
management.’ And the response is, ‘Which one?’ Is it the DHAP? Is it the housing? Is it
Catholic Charities? Is it ICNA? Is it Jesse Tree? So that's the first starting point. And so
empowering those organizations with funds to gear up on case managers that remain in the
community once again, that are here from the community that's been impacted and provide
jobs, as well to additional people is my recommendation of the highest priority in this area.”- Joe
Compian, Gulf Coast Interfaith and Catholic Campaign for Human Development
“And my last comment, I think, is that please in the future planning make sure that case
management lasts as long as the housing program does. We're in a bind because the RISE
program and the SSBG funds are about to stop, and my one and only housing case manager is
freaking out.” –Joanne Callahan Ducharme, Director, Montgomery County Community Development
“The case management is critical and activating that more quickly is essential…And I think
dealing with the case management issue and having some sort of bridge funding that's preapproved and we know we can activate immediately after a storm can help us identify things
more quickly.” Amanda Timm, Executive Director, Local Initiative Support Corporation
“In case management right now, we can't take any new cases because our project is closing, and
just Galveston alone we have over 500 homeowners that we've case-managed, we've done all
that we can for them, and they're sitting there waiting to find out if they're going to be eligible
for CDBG money, they're in the process. And we're going to be leaving, next month, them to
their own means, and they're not going to know. And SSBG is another one. The SSBG money
stops this month and yet these people are waiting for that money. And it's all a matter of
46

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
synchronization, and synchronization, I think, has to do with long-range planning, and so if you
can keep the planning going on how we can synchronize all these resources and these events
and continue to work on that, that would be great.” – William Sullivan, Sullivan Interests, Ltd
In order to minimize confusion amongst displaced families, local jurisdictions should coordinate
and facilitate a transition process, by which the faith based case manager and the SSBG case
manager are engaged in ongoing communication with each other, to hand over case management
processes successfully.
12. The Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs and Texas Health and
Humans Services Commission should convene Hurricane Ike and Dolly case managers to
develop standards and procedures for case management following a disaster.
Following a natural disaster, many case managers are unprepared to provide the types of assistance
that displaced families will require in order to locate emergency housing and maintain housing
stability. Case managers may not know who the housing experts are or how to gain the knowledge
they need to pass on to their clients. As a consequence, households are often left to figure it out on
their own, passed from one person to the next.
Having just provided assistance following Hurricanes Ike and Dolly, local case managers contracted
through SSBG and CDBG funding have the experience and knowledge regarding the best practices
in helping a displaced family receive assistance and rebuild their home. The Committee sees the
opportunity to convene these individuals in order to create a set of case management procedures
for future disasters.
13. Local jurisdictions should utilize the state’s network of modular and manufactured
housing developers to rapidly construct and deliver homes immediately following a natural
disaster. These homes can also be utilized as permanent housing solutions in the future.
Following a natural disaster, the most rapid means of housing displaced individuals and families
(other than travel trailers, which are rapidly deployed but have unacceptable problems when used on
an extended basis) is through the use of manufactured or modular housing. As stated in testimony
given by manufactured housing developers, local production facilities would be able to ramp up
production and delivery in a matter of weeks.
“So with the industry in Texas, we can produce 10 to 15 homes a day out of the factories that
we're doing without giving up our existing business. If we were to concentrate solely on it, you
could double that, 30 to 50 houses a day, easily…If we were going to concentrate on the
International Residential Code, it would limit it to the factories that are capable of doing that.
If you're going to go with the Manufactured Housing Code, then it would probably triple that
amount, easily triple that amount that was available.” - Keith Alexander, President of Southwest
Manufacturing, Palm Harbor Homes
“We have two manufacturing facilities in Texas and both of them are Energy Star certified and
both of them are certified under a certified Green Program. We have the capacity to build both
short-term and long-term housing. We could build up to 50 homes a week after ramping up for
30 days to ship into the disaster area. That's temporary housing. We'd easily build 40
permanent houses, also each week following that. Today if we had a disaster today we could
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
provide up to 200 homes immediately to the disaster area right from our own inventory.” –
Ronnie Richards, American Home Star/Oak Creek Homes
Additionally, all homes go through full inspection prior to delivery and modular homes are built to
IRC Code, while manufactured homes are built to HUD code. TDHCA guidelines require
Windstorm II rated manufactured homes in Coastal counties. Another factor in factor of
manufactured and modular homes is that they can be built to match the specific design characteristics
and overall aesthetic of a neighborhood. Finally, these homes can be quickly installed as temporary
housing structures and then transitioned to permanent structures over time. They can also be
expanded upon, for households seeking to add to the core unit.
“And we have to have a Texas Department of Insurance type inspection to our plant when the
home's being built, because there's different requirements to put them down here on the coast.
So there's a third-party engineering firm that seals those and goes and actually inspects them.
Then when the home is delivered there's inspecting the foundations and all the other parts of
that, too, and the way they're installed… Then we have to have another if it's coming down
here, we have to have a third-party engineer that's a Texas professional engineer come in and
watch to make sure that the right numbers of nails are going in, that they're using all galvanized
strapping and galvanized tacks and all that kind of stuff. So they have to be
they do an
inspection in the plant. It's pretty substantial.” – Ronnie Richards, American Home Star/Oak Creek
Homes
“We're absolutely capable of producing any home that's acceptable in any economic area or any
architectural desired area. For example, our industry has placed houses -- we've got some
houses in Tarrytown, we've got houses in the historical architectural areas of New Orleans. So
it all comes down to what are the specifications that TDHCA or FEMA or whomever would
want in that area and we can provide that.” - Keith Alexander, President of Southwest Manufacturing,
Palm Harbor Homes
Currently, many local jurisdictions affected by Hurricanes Rita and Ike are contracting with
manufactured housing developers. Testimony revealed that not only these developers more efficient
in economies of scale, but it is also easier for the local jurisdiction to deal with just one prime
contractor, that takes care of all site preparation, inspections, delivery, and installation. Jurisdictions
found that using one contractor made bidding quicker, easier, and required less staffing on the part of
the jurisdiction.
“Montgomery County went with 100 percent modular housing for replacement housing. We
did that for several reasons. We went with it because we believed that was going to be more
efficient in economy of scale…We sold it to our commissioners by pointing out that it's a vast
improvement over the housing that our low income people were living in in the first place. So
whatever concerns people have with modular housing, it is still a vast improvement…We went
with modular housing because it's a whole lot easier to deal with one prime contractor. Our
prime contractor, who is M-Space and is one on their list, he takes care of getting the slab
dropped and all the inspections and making sure the tie-downs are correct, and he coordinates
the delivery, and it allows me to have fewer staff. So in the long run, all these offsets to my
square footage costs are paying off.” –Joanne Callahan Ducharme, Director, Montgomery County
Community Development
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
The Committee recommends that local jurisdictions contract with manufactured housing developers
to provide modular and manufactured homes immediately following a natural disaster. Particularly,
the Committee encourages that these contracts be pre-bid contracts, as mentioned earlier.
14. Immediately post-disaster, where a widespread contiguous geographic area is affected,
local jurisdiction should hold neighborhood design forums, where architects are
commissioned to conduct a design consultation for all homeowners.
In order to ensure resident buy-in, local jurisdictions must present opportunities to provide input and
to choose which housing designs best fit their neighborhood aesthetic. Design details such as the
paint color, materials used, height of the home, pitch of the roof, and character of the façade are all
key elements.
“I think, related to the types of housing being discussed, we want to emphasize, because of the
character of neighborhoods and because of what communities are built of, that the local
context is taken into consideration regarding appearance.” - Amanda Timm, Executive Director,
Local Initiative Support Corporation
“People need choices. That's a really big part of going back to people. They really need to be
able to go and say, you know, not just is it pink or blue. People when they have a choice they
buy in to where they're living. They take care of it. They love it. And a building will only last as
long as it's loved.” - Chula Sanchez, Architect, Chair of the U.S. Green Building Council for Galveston
County
“If you give the people choices they feel like they've bought into something. And I think that is
probably the biggest thing, because we do that in southeast Texas. If you'd talk to your city and
you get the city or your local officials behind you and working and that could be you all getting
you getting in and working with the nonprofits, it makes it go a lot easier. I mean, it really
does…But it does give you an opening to get in there and to speak. And the people in Port
Arthur, when they had a choice it moved so much easier and so much faster.” – Jonnye
Williamson, Southeast Texas Interfaith Organization
The Committee recommends that, in addition to procedures found in the “Hurricanes Ike and Dolly
Round 2 Housing Guidelines,” local jurisdictions should commission architects in advance to lead
community forums. At these forums, homeowners would see a selection of site plans from which to
choose. The architects would engage residents in a neighborhood design process, explaining specific
design specifications and answering questions, ultimately moving to help community support coalesce
around a menu of acceptable designs.
15. Local jurisdictions should enter into a three party construction agreement with the
household and the builder for the ownership of the home.
Currently, for those homes being reconstructed with CDBG funding awarded for areas affected by
Hurricanes Rita, Ike, and Dolly, the local jurisdiction (city, county, or COG) will enter into a
construction agreement with both the developer and the applicant household when transferring
ownership. This three party process is beneficial to the homeowner for multiple reasons. Many times
households do not have experience communicating with builders; so the local jurisdiction is able to
provide their expertise. Additionally, after the household moves in, should something go wrong with
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
the home, the households are provided comfort in knowing that the local jurisdiction will be involved
in holding the builder accountable for maintenance and repairs.
16. The State should convene an advisory body of engineers, design experts, and insurance
risk assessors to undertake an Economic and Design study, evaluating the cost-benefit
tradeoffs between insurance provision and construction of hardened structures.
The costs of maintaining flood insurance, windstorm insurance, and hazard insurance are prohibitive
to low income families. Those households who are unable to afford insurance on their government
funded, reconstructed home will likely decide to forgo insuring their home, making their home
susceptible to destruction and making the family susceptible to displacement following the next
natural disaster. This is an inefficient use of taxpayer dollars. The Committee discussed the possibility
of lengthening the time that the State provides insurance coverage on a reconstructed home from one
year to five years; however this expense would likely reduce the total number of homes that could be
reconstructed following a disaster.
“Another incident we have, of course, is the insurance. Our typical client, homes have been
given through the Rita Program that are valued at about $85,000, that's typical on the tax rolls.
With our tax structure in Jasper and the homes, those folks are typically paying about $1,400 a
year. Then we start dealing with them on the insurance, and many of these have poor credit
which results in a high insurance rate.” – McNeal Adams, Lone Star Youth Council, Inc.
Given that many reconstructed homes will likely remain uninsured, an alternative solution proposed
by the Committee would be to create hardened structures, resistant to a natural disaster. These homes
would include thicker cement board siding, steel insulated doors, shuttered windows, and a thicker
non-shingled roof structure. However, hardening a structure can add up to 20% to the cost of
constructing the home, again causing a reduction in the total number of homes that could be
reconstructed by the State. Additionally, in the past hardened structures have been met with
community resistance, as the design elements are deemed aesthetically incompatible with the
surrounding neighborhood.
Thus, the Committee recommends that the Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs
form an advisory body, consisting of design experts, engineers, and insurance risk assessors, to
evaluate the cost-benefit tradeoffs between a lengthened state provision of insurance and the
construction of hardened structures. The body would be required to deliver its findings to TDHCA
in an Economic and Design Study.
17. Following a disaster, the Office of Public Insurance Counsel (OPIC) and the State Bar
of Texas should provide education and outreach to low income households regarding
insurance protection for homes that have been reconstructed.
Many homeowners are inexperienced in negotiating insurance rates and filing insurance claims. The
Office of Public Insurance Counsel (OPIC) represents the interests of consumers as a class in
insurance matters, advocating for consumers in rate, form, and rule proceedings primarily at the
Texas Department of Insurance (TDI). To accomplish its mission, OPIC’s responsibilities include:
reviewing rate and policy form filings, and working with TDI and insurance companies to negotiate

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
changes advantageous to consumers; and providing information to consumers regarding insurance
coverage and markets.59
Additionally, the State Bar of Texas provides pro-bono legal advice and assistance to consumers on
disaster-related issues, such as insurance. The Hurricane Ike Legal Task Force created a Resource
Manual for volunteer attorneys and case managers fielding legal questions from those affected by
Hurricane Ike.60
The Committee recommends that the OPIC and the State Bar of Texas conduct extensive outreach
to low income consumers following a disaster, holding educational meetings to advise households on
insurance costs, legal requirements, and the consequences of not maintaining insurance. Additionally,
these organizations should make consumers aware of the possibility of relocation, which can be
financed through FEMA’s Hazard Mitigation Grant Program.
18. The state should establish an advisory committee of architects and engineers, to
develop a set of solutions to issues of visitability in reconstructed housing following a
natural disaster.
According to Texas Government Code, Section 2306.514, “If a person is awarded state or federal
funds by the department to construct single family affordable housing for individuals and families of
low and very low income, the affordable housing identified on the person's funding application must
be constructed so that:(1) at least one entrance door, whether located at the front, side, or back of the
building:(A) is on an accessible route served by a ramp or no-step entrance.”61 This statutory
requirement is more commonly known as the state’s visitability law.
As noted in previous chapters, when reconstructing housing following a disaster, the current cost of
making a property visitable for persons with disabilities is quite high, particularly in areas with
elevation requirements. Additionally, there are many obstacles to the creation and maintenance of
ramps or lifts on the exterior of a property. Many lots in more dense locations, such as Galveston, are
not large enough to provide ramps which extend from the ground to the entrance of the housing
unit, which may be fourteen feet in the air. Additionally, in coastal locations along the Gulf, the salt
and moisture in the air can quickly rust the metal components of a lift, making the lift unusable and
the cost of maintenance prohibitive to some low income households.
“And that also, the one that you're going to see today has a lift that was like, $15 or $20,000 on
it for, you know, handicapped use…We're using lifts and it is expensive. The cost of those
ramps is significant, though, too.” Ronnie Richards, American Home Star/Oak Creek Homes
“If you have to elevate a home, we do pier and beam construction. But we have to elevate it.
And we have the standards TDHCA has, where you have to have at least one zero step
59

Texas Sunset Advisory Commission, Commission Decisions – Office of Public Insurance Counsel, Agency at a
Glance (April 2010) http://www.sunset.state.tx.us/82ndreports/tdi/tdi_dec.pdf
60
Hurricane Ike Legal Task Force, Resource Materials for Responding to Legal Questions from those Affected by
Hurricane Ike (September 26, 2008)
http://www.texasbar.com/Content/NavigationMenu/ForThePublic/DisasterReliefResources/HurricaneIkeDisasterLegal
ResourcesManual.pdf
61
Texas Government Code, Title 10, Subtitle G, Section 2306.514. Construction Requirements for Single Family
Affordable Housing http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/GV/htm/GV.2306.htm

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
entrance. Which means, we have had to put in a lot of ramps for people who have no one who
is disabled. Which is more time, and people don't like it. Those take a lot of time, and keep us
from being able to respond quickly.” - Ann Williams-Cass, Executive Director, Proyecto Azteca &
Equal Voice Network
“But a lot of the houses in Sabine Pass were we needed handicapped ramp and we need ramps.
And I've seen some around here going up. They look like a zig-zag going. It's a huge issue. And
when you get a 70 or 80 year old little lady that, you know, wants to get back in her house and
she you know, we have a little old lady in Bridge City that's 90 years old and she just wants to
get in her house before she dies. I mean, you know. And you see these [ramps] they're, I'm
sorry. They're ugly.” – Jonnye Williamson, Southeast Texas Interfaith Organization
“I hear everybody saying that elevators or lifts are the way to go. But I have concerns about
them in Galveston with the salt air. I live out in the west end of the island. And I have
neighbors who are quite affluent and still complain about how much it costs to maintain them.
And I'm worrying about low-income people maintaining them.” - Laura Murrell, Galveston
Recovery Housing and Outreach and Gulf Coast Interfaith
Therefore, the Committee recommends that the Texas Department of Housing & Community
Affairs form an advisory committee, bringing together architects and engineers, particularly those
who have expertise in accessibility modifications, to discuss and make recommended solutions
regarding issues of visitability for reconstructed housing following a natural disaster.
19. To ensure both the durability and sustainability of reconstructed housing, rebuilt
homes should be required to include disaster resistant building materials as well as meet
ENERGY STAR rating standards.
As mentioned in Recommendation #1, many of the households displaced after Hurricanes Rita, Ike,
and Dolly were living in substandard housing units that were susceptible to substantial damage from a
natural disaster. Additionally, substandard homes are unable to provide sufficient heating and cooling
to a home, often causing low income households to be strapped with high energy bills that they
cannot afford. In order to ensure that these households are protected from future displacement, the
Committee strongly encourages investment in high quality, durable housing materials and design that
also add to the energy efficiency of the home.
“You have fewer people with emergency housing needs, if you have more people living in
quality housing to begin with. Because the houses stand up to a storm better…If everybody's
houses are in better shape, fewer people are going to need emergency assistance.” - Emily
Rickers, Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid
“We're talking about families that typically, in our program, the typical family probably makes
about $700 a month. So utilities, this is another area that we have to work with families on
because, again, most of them this month their utility bills were around $300 a month.” - McNeal
Adams, Lone Star Youth Council, Inc.
“And sustainability is about the whole neighborhood as well and paying attention to that, but
also emphasizing the importance of addressing air quality inside the home, the indoor air
quality.” - Amanda Timm, Executive Director, Local Initiative Support Corporation
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Certain materials and building technologies provide greater resilience in the face of severe storms
while simultaneously making the home more energy-efficient.62 The expanded use of such materials
could provide a more cost-effective way for new and existing homes to be more resistant to disasters
and more energy efficient.
“But the one that the most important one that did make it is to build to 145 miles an hour. I
think that's critical for rebuild, because if it doesn't stay put we lose our tax base. I forgot to
mention all the debris, the building debris that goes in landfills. And we're all paying for that. I
mean, it's life cycle it's huge life cycle. So upping the wind code for me is really paramount to all
of it. Durability and maintenance is number one for sustainability…And so I think when you
start writing your specs for rebuild on these 60 homes those specs are key. It's just it's the bible
to rebuild…And it goes into durability, energy efficiency and air quality, because most of these a
lot of these recovery homes are for families with children and older people.” - Chula Sanchez,
Architect, Chair of the U.S. Green Building Council for Galveston County
ENERGY STAR is a joint program of the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US
Department of Energy, created to save money and protect the environment through energy efficient
products and practices.63 To earn the ENERGY STAR, a home must meet strict guidelines for energy
efficiency, making them 20–30% more efficient than standard homes. Homes achieve this level of
performance through a combination of energy–efficient improvements, including:
• Effective Insulation Systems
• High–Performance Windows
• Tight Construction and Ducts
• Efficient Heating and Cooling Equipment
• Qualified Lighting and Appliances
The Advisory Committee recommends that the ENERGY STAR rating standard be adopted by local
jurisdictions as a requirement for all homes reconstructed following a natural disaster, to provide
better protection and prevent displacement in the event of future disasters.
20. Local jurisdictions should develop standards for the potential expansion of
reconstructed housing units over the long-term.
During the immediate disaster recovery phase, many homes will be placed that serve as a temporary
or interim housing structure. Households may later choose to expand upon these original units,
adding extra rooms onto the building.
“For the size of the homes, we are looking at setting them up fast, having them long term,
eventually transitioning to permanent structures.” - Martin Medina, Director of Strategic Initiatives,
Affordable Homes of South Texas, Inc.

62

Center for Housing Policy & National Housing Conference, Make Homes More Resistant to Natural Disasters:
Incorporate Materials and Technologies that Provide Both Disaster Resistance and Energy Efficiency
http://www.housingpolicy.org/toolbox/strategy/policies/distrest_energeff.html?tierid=113299
63
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency & U.S. Department of Energy, How New Homes Earn the ENERGY STAR,
http://www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=new_homes.nh_verification_process

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
The Committee recommends that as part of their housing reconstructions planning effort, local
jurisdictions include guidelines, for architects and builders, for those instances of housing expansion.
These guidelines should require that housing additions meet the same building codes and permitting
requirements that the original structure was required to meet.
21. Local jurisdictions should partner with local non-profit organizations or local financial
institutions to provide financial literacy and homebuyer education to households receiving
reconstructed homes.
Many households receiving a reconstructed home are not knowledgeable about the financial
responsibilities involved in becoming a homeowner. Possible consequences of not understanding
these responsibilities include foreclosure and displacement.
“People that are going to get reconstructed homes need those home ownership classes probably
even more. It's a hard sell in our community to provide a lot of money because basically we're
putting in more money than the homeowner has equity, so they're upside down. And again, it's
tough to do, especially now when times are bad. We couldn't do it when times were good so it's
really difficult to do when times are bad…It's part of the provider infrastructure. What's
missing, I think, is someone to be able to go in and provide it. Because it's not coming from us,
so they're not so suspicious, oh, you're just telling me that. It needs to be from another source
that they trust and can answer all their questions away from us.” - Carol Borrego, Fort Bend County
Community Development
The Committee recommends that local jurisdictions require applicant households to attend in-person
financial literacy training and homebuyer education classes prior to receiving their home. The
household’s case manager would provide information about the classes and assist the family in
becoming enrolled.
Good financial literacy training and planning can be provided through Neighborhood Housing
Services of America. Additionally, groups such as Habitat for Humanity have created partnerships
with local banks to provide this education.
“We provide our homeowners financial literacy and budgeting classes through Capital One
Bank and they do it for free. There's some type of ordinance where banks are supposed to do
some type of community outreach. So we just set the classes up and we set them all together
and we give them some equity hours for going to the classes, and we find that real valuable for
them.” – Natalie Ainsworth, Bay Area Habitat for Humanity
Post-Disaster Recommendations Requiring Legislative Action
22. Following a disaster, tax appraisal districts should automatically freeze property taxes
to the pre-disaster value of properties owned by low income households and allow for a
gradual increase up to the value of the reconstructed home.
Of all the barriers to permanent housing for low income victims of natural disasters mentioned at the
community roundtables, the issue most frequently discussed was property taxes. After the rebuilding
efforts following Hurricane Rita, many low income households are struggling to afford the increase in
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
property taxes on their reconstructed homes. This potential increase to their property taxes has also
made families weary of accepting government assistance for Hurricanes Ike and Dolly.
“My biggest barrier in my program, the thing that is pulling people out of my program right and
left at this point, at this late hour, is that they're realizing that we're vastly improving their living
conditions and their tax burden, and the increased taxes on the properties are not being offset
by our predictions of improved electrical bills. And the ones that are worried about paying their
taxes are pulling out of my program and I can't get them to stop. So we are hemorrhaging
eligible clients right now on that issue alone…And we have talked to our tax assessor-collector
and there ain't going to be no freezing of the taxes and there ain't going to be no exemptions or
waivers or nothing for anybody except the seniors on the rolls.” –Joanne Callahan Ducharme,
Director, Montgomery County Community Development
“Where you put a family in an $80,000 home, but they can't afford a mortgage. They can only
do a $40,000 home. So you write down with soft money. You get grants or whatever. But
appraisal districts are going to charge. They are going to assess the property at $80,000. And
they are going to charge your taxes at that. Next year, it might be 90 or 100. And everybody
knows that the incomes of low-income families do not grow in proportion to inflation or the
way expenses are.” –Apolonio Flores, Consultant, Rio Grande Valley Housing Authorities
“In Fort Bend County we are rapidly growing, so our property taxes are killing everyone. I've
kind of personally been appalled with the fact that if we do reconstruct a house, I have one
right now that's probably on the tax rolls for maybe $15,000, that's the improvement of the
property, and we build a home that's going to be about $60,000, their taxes are probably going
to go up about four times, the person probably cannot afford it. With all our other HUD
programs that we administer, we always do some underwriting. We look that those people
should not pay more than 30 percent of their income for all housing costs which include
payment, taxes and insurance. We're setting up to fail because you're looking at ratios of maybe
40 percent, 50 percent.” –Carol Borrego, Fort Bend County Community Development
“The other thing is one of the problems that we ran into in the with the government efforts to
rehouse initially was taxes. There's a family of moderate income that's living in a $30,000 house
and you come in there and build them a $100,000 house and now all of sudden their tax bill is
high.”- Bob Williamson, Southeast Texas Interfaith Organization
During the 81st legislature, HB 770 became law amending the Texas Tax Code for appraisal values on
disaster damaged homes. The Committee recommends that new legislation further amends the new
rules, and low income households that are either damaged or destroyed be exempt from all increased
property taxes for a set period of time following the reconstruction of their home. After this time
frame, the tax appraisal district would gradually increase the portion of the total valuation paid by the
household over time by an amount not greater than five percent annually. This critical stabilization
would help to ensure that over time households that had been hit by natural disasters would restore
themselves to stable home owners capable of meeting the obligations that go with that home
ownership.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
23. Encourage the state to prevent the stripping of disaster loans and issue a five year
prohibition on cash out home equity loans for government funded reconstructed homes,
allowing exceptions approved by the state for bona fide emergencies.
In previous instances, after the provision of zero percent interest government loans to households,
subprime lenders have approached these homeowners to offer them cash out refinancing at high
interest rates. Households who took out one of these home equity loans defaulted, as they could not
afford the loan they were offered, and the lender repossessed their home. To prevent this predatory
practice, the state legislature passed Texas Finance Code, Section 343.101, stating that “A lender may
not replace or consolidate a low-rate home loan directly made by a government or nonprofit lender
before the seventh anniversary of the date of the loan unless the new or consolidated loan has a lower
interest rate and requires payment of a lesser amount of points and fees than the original loan or is a
restructure to avoid foreclosure.”64
In order to prevent this predatory practice from happening to natural disaster victims who received
government funding for housing reconstruction, the Committee recommends that Section 343.101 be
expanded to include government issued deferred forgivable loans.
Additionally, the Committee sees the need for increased monitoring of the deferred forgivable loans
issues for housing reconstruction after natural disasters. These loans act as grants, with no repayment
to the state, as long as the household remains in the home for ten years. However, because there is no
lien placed on the property by the state, and the property is not filed in the county courthouse, it
becomes very difficult for the state to monitor these households, to ensure their residence in the
home. Therefore, in order to ensure that the households themselves do not cash out on their
government funded reconstructed property, the Committee recommends that the state require a five
year prohibition on home equity refinancing, with ability to obtain exception approval for bona fide
emergencies.

64

Texas Finance Code, Title 4, Subtitle B, Section 343.101 - Refinancing
http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/FI/htm/FI.343.htm#343.105

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Conclusion 
NEXT STEPS
In coordination with TDHCA, the Natural Disaster Housing Reconstruction Advisory Committee is
currently using the findings and recommendations found in the Housing Reconstruction Plan to
develop guidelines for the implementation of the Housing Reconstruction Demonstration Pilot
Program. As directed in statute, this Pilot Program should test the feasibility of implementing the plan
for the large-scale production of replacement housing for victims of federally declared natural disasters.
In accordance with the Conciliation Agreement and the State of Texas Plan for Disaster Recovery – Revised
Amendment No. 1, funds for the Pilot Program will be awarded in the following jurisdictions: Harris
County, Galveston County, and the Lower Rio Grande Valley Development Council region.
Based upon the Housing Reconstruction Plan, the Advisory Committee has brainstormed ideas for the
implementation of the Pilot Program, specifically looking at the following categories: Project
Administration, Housing Design, Housing Production and Delivery, and Client Support Services.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Appendix A: The Heston Home Project and Why it Did Not Work for Texas  
In connection with FEMA’s efforts to identify and test possible alternatives to the FEMA trailer
FEMA issued a Notice of Funding for the Alternative Housing Pilot Program (AHPP). TDHCA
submitted six proposals; FEMA selected one and funded TDHCA to carry out the program for the
State of Texas. The solution selected to be tested under this program was the “Heston Home,” a
panelized, containerized housing unit. The company that manufactured the units was located in Italy,
but an affiliated company in the United States, Heston LLC (“Heston”), was selected as a sole source
provider to oversee the deployment of this unique product under the test conditions required by
FEMA.
The goal of the Texas AHPP was to provide between 40 and 50 permanent homes in the East Texas
region and an estimated 20 units for a group site to be placed in the City of Houston/Harris County.
Heston was to construct these homes in East Texas and the group site for the City of Houston to
determine if the product could be used as a travel trailer substitute, if the product could be mobilized
and deployed quickly and whether the technology was appropriate in a disaster response situation.
Despite Heston’s expressed application representations regarding capacity, the company ultimately
proved ill-equipped to perform as required. After various issues had been identified by TDHCA (lack
of ability to adapt to changing program circumstances, lack of production, staffing issues, and failure to
address concerns that were raised during monitoring) and Heston was advised of needed corrections
however formal notice of a default and opportunity to cure was given when Heston failed to address
the issues. The agreement was formally terminated on July 31, 2009.
In assessing Heston’s activities in order to address their final draw under the contract, a number of
concerns were identified, including:





Significant costs that had been submitted for reimbursement which, upon review, did not
appear to be adequately documented to support payment;
Submitted requests for reimbursement of ineligible costs;
Apparently duplicative costs for services procured in connection with the installation of homes;
and
Defective installation and/or damaged homes.

In addition, Heston had a record of incurring costs which, although they might be for allowable
activities, were so excessive as to indicate imprudence. Upon further scrutiny, some of these costs
appear to have been duplicative, not allowable, and/or possibly fraudulent. Other costs were supported
by statements or invoices, but were not reimbursed without adequate support. . TDHCA identified
Heston failed to appropriately pay subcontractors for invoices paid by TDHCA. These matters are
being investigated, and no final payment will be made to Heston until and unless these issues are
resolved and appropriately documented.
Examples of defective installation and/or damaged homes are as follows:
Electrical Wiring – The homes have been shown to be at risk of electrical failure. Master electricians
spent days in several of the units attempting to follow the wiring system and determine what was
causing the problems. In one unit, none of the outlets worked correctly. Two of the homes appear
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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
to have been wired opposite of what they should have been; when lights were turned on in one
room it blew the fuses in other parts of the home.
Plumbing - Problems such as poor drainage, lack of capacity to handle constant use, leaks and other
problems have plagued three of the units but most specifically the unit in Port Arthur. Additionally,
the sewer drains in two houses drained toward the home, not away from it.
Air Conditioning Units - A/C units in three of the homes have shorted out repeatedly and
constantly cycle causing the homes to overheat or become too cold. In one of the homes the A/C
units only worked briefly or did not worked at all. The A/C units installed in the AHPP homes are
not typical wall units seen in homes but instead are typical of the wall units found in hotels and
motels. Servicing of them has been difficult due to the unconventional model type and the
unavailability of repair companies in the area that are familiar with the model type.
Poor Quality of Materials - Due to possible leaks at the seams where the units were put together, as
well as a missing A/C sleeve, water is able to intrude after running down exterior walls causing
failure of the sub-floor in one unit in particular. Floors have become mushy and buckled within
days of heavy rain leaving room for mold intrusion. In three of the homes, light could be seen at
points where the home was put together, around the windows, and air conditioning units.
Energy Efficiency - Despite claims that the units would be energy efficient, homeowners have
reported that their electrical bills have actually increased during the winter months. Due to the lack
of industry typical insulation, when the heat was on, the hot air went to the ceiling causing it to be
very warm, but the floor area was ice cold. One homeowner registered a 20+ degree difference
from floor to ceiling.
Repairs were necessary to correct these deficiencies.
As a result of the Heston contract termination, the Department posted a Request for Proposal (RFP)
for a contractor to complete the remaining portion of the program (the Houston group site and
maintenance on existing East Texas units). The response deadline for the RFP was March 1, 2010 in
order to allow time to coordinate with the City of Houston (the City) with regard to the logistics of the
group site.
However, following an extended negotiation and planning period with the City, the City and TDHCA
decided not to pursue the group site application of AHPP any further due to the difficulty the City
encountered with locating the funding necessary for the group site. Due to the complications that arose
in trying to finalize a group site and the decision to remove the City from the program, the previously
posted Request for Proposals (RFP) to solicit the participation of a replacement contractor for the
Heston Group to install the AHPP units on the group site was cancelled.
On Tuesday, June 8, 2010, TDHCA staff held a conference call with FEMA HQ to discuss next steps
for the program in light of the decision made regarding the Houston group site. FEMA and TDHCA
both agreed that it would be appropriate at this point to begin grant close out activities, bringing the
Houston group site planning and the Texas AHPP as a whole to an end.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Appendix B: Evaluating Permanent Manufactured Housing Costs
Shifting away from federal policymaking and funding resources, this chapter of the Plan looks at the
costs to deploy manufactured homes that can be transitioned from temporary to permanent housing.
COMPARISON OF HUD, MODULAR, AND SITE-BUILT HOMES

HUD Code Home. The cost breakdown for a HUD built manufactured home that comes closest
to what a site-built includes (100% drywall, stainless or rubbed bronze with glass fixtures, cementtype siding, etc.) is as follows:65
Table 2: HUD Code Home ‐ Cost Breakdown
Item
Cost
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1,984 sq. ft, HUD 
Code manufactured home, 
$50,000‐$70,000 ($25‐$35 a sq ft)
comparable to a site‐built home
Site and delivery costs, freight, AC, 
set‐up & skirting, and profit for the   $24,000‐$30,000 ($12‐$15 a sq ft)
manufacturer
Site improvements (water well, 
septic, driveways, etc.) and cost of  $30,000‐$50,000 ($15‐25 a sq ft)
land
Total Cost
$120,000 to $148,000 ($60‐$75 a sq. ft.)

Given the assumption that site-built home prices range from $100 to $115 a square foot, a HUD
built homes is priced at 60%-75% of a site-built home. Smaller and lesser priced HUD homes can
cost as little as 50% of a site-built home.

65

Estimates given by Keith Alexander of Palm Harbor Plant, Austin, TX. NOTE: Cost factors added into this analysis
include the cost of the land.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Modular Home. The cost breakdown for a Modular home that comes closest to what a site-built

includes (100% drywall, stainless or rubbed bronze with glass fixtures, cement-type siding, etc.) is as
follows:66
Table 3: Modular Home ‐ Cost Breakdown
Item
Cost
3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1,984 sq. ft, HUD 
Code manufactured home, 
$50,000‐$70,000 ($25 to $35 a sq ft)
comparable to a site‐built home
Manufacturers transition a HUD 
home to a Modular (on‐frame) 
 $4,000 to $6,000 ($2‐$3 a sq ft)
home
Transition unit to off‐frame
$1,000 to $2,000  ($0.5 to $1 a sq ft)
Residential 6/12 pitch roof
$2,000 to $3,500 ($1 to $1.75 a sq ft)
Site and delivery costs, with freight, 
AC, delivery, set‐up & skirting, and 
a profit for the store
$30,000 to $40,000 ($15‐$20 a sq ft)
Pour a pier and beam stem wall 
foundation system and for a crane 
to pick up and set the home
$8,000 ($4 a sq ft)
Site improvements (water well, 
septic, driveways, etc.) and cost of 
land
$50,000‐$60,000 ($25‐$30 a sq. ft.) 
Total Cost
$145,000 to $189,000 ($72‐$95 a sq. ft.)

Given the assumption that $100-$115 a sq. ft. is reasonable for a site-built home price, a modular
home only has a 10%-15% price advantage over site built. In today's market, with so many sitebuilders cutting their costs and giving away construction to keep their employees and subcontractors from leaving, manufacturers are seeing almost no price advantage when comparing
modular to site built, with most deals somewhere between 0% - 7% advantage. The biggest thing
manufacturer’s offer right now is stability and a 60-120 day time frame for construction and movein, as compared to 6-12 months for a site-built home.
ELEVATION COSTS
The Advisory Committee sought estimates regarding the added cost to manufactured and modular
housing for coastal homes to be elevated above minimum Base Flood Elevation (BFE). According
to FEMA, “The BFE refers to the elevation associated with the 100-year flood, or it is a flood with
a 1 percent chance of occurrence in any given year.”67 American Homestar, a manufactured housing
producer which completed elevation projects in Sabine Pass following Hurricane Rita, gave

66

Estimates given by Keith Alexander of Palm Harbor Plant, Austin, TX. NOTE: Cost factors added into this analysis
include the cost of the land.
67
Federal Emergency Management Agency, “Managing Floodplain Development Through The National Flood
Insurance Program,” http://www.fema.gov/plan/prevent/floodplain/nfipkeywords/base_flood_elevation.shtm

61

NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 
estimated elevation costs. American Homestar placed modular homes and HUD homes on the
elevated foundations 12 feet above BFE.
The total cost to elevate a 30 x 42 double section was approximately $60,000. The breakdown of
this total includes: ramps and decks - $15,000; piling and banding - $20,000; crane and set - $6,000
to $10,000; and lifts - $20,000.

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NATURAL DISASTER HOUSING RECONSTRUCTION PLAN 

Appendix C: Community Roundtable Public Participation
Harlingen Roundtable – August 25th, 2010
Apolonio Flores
Martin Medina
Lina Mendez-Romero
Sonny Philip
Jim Richardson
Emily Rickers
Ann Williams-Cass
Houston Roundtable – August 31st, 2010
Natalie Aimsworth
Keith Alexander
Carol Borrego
P.K. Carlton
Tanya Debose
Joanne Ducharme
Gordon Knight
Don McCann
Rick Patino
Jennifer Post
Victor Rivera
Billy Sullivan
Amanda Timm
Galveston Roundtable – September 2nd, 2010
Bilal Abdullah
Tommy Blanchard
Joe Compian
Matthew Erchull
James Hall
Michael Morgan
Laura Murrell
Ronnie Richards
Chula Sanchez
Larry Shine
Bob Williamson
Jonnye Williamson

63

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